SOCCER PLAYER

Ivan Jurić

1975 - Today

Photo of Ivan Jurić

Icon of person Ivan Jurić

Ivan Jurić (pronounced [ǐʋan jǔːritɕ]; born 25 August 1975) is a Croatian professional football manager and a former player who played as a midfielder. He is the head coach of Serie A club Atalanta. A midfielder, Jurić made his professional debut at Hajduk Split in 1993. He went on to play for Sevilla, Albacete, Šibenik, Crotone, and Genoa, where he retired in 2010. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ivan Jurić is the 4,073rd most popular soccer player (up from 5,326th in 2019), the 339th most popular biography from Croatia (up from 385th in 2019) and the 75th most popular Croatian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Ivan Jurić by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Ivan Jurić ranks 4,073 out of 21,273Before him are Arie Schans, Stefan Schwarz, Marcos Calderón, João Mário, Takumi Minamino, and Harry Lundahl. After him are Héctor Salva, Aaron Ramsey, Otávio Edmilson da Silva Monteiro, Halil Altıntop, Adolfo Valencia, and Raúl Vicente Amarilla.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1975, Ivan Jurić ranks 174Before him are Jonah Lomu, Sebastián Rulli, Stéphanie Szostak, Ryoko Uno, Ruslan Stefanchuk, and Richard Kelly. After him are Aksel Hennie, Denis Bećirović, Quim, Cristiano Lucarelli, Ekta Kapoor, and Robbie Fowler.

Others Born in 1975

Go to all Rankings

In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Ivan Jurić ranks 339 out of 700Before him are Emir Spahić (1980), Ivan Šantek (1932), Zoran Primorac (1969), Bruno Belin (1929), Tomislav Erceg (1971), and Ivan Jazbinšek (1914). After him are Zoran Mamić (1971), Mihovil Nakić (1955), Branko Kralj (1924), Jakov Fak (1987), Stojko Vranković (1964), and Dominik Livaković (1995).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Croatia

Among soccer players born in Croatia, Ivan Jurić ranks 75Before him are Ivan Gudelj (1960), Emir Spahić (1980), Ivan Šantek (1932), Bruno Belin (1929), Tomislav Erceg (1971), and Ivan Jazbinšek (1914). After him are Zoran Mamić (1971), Branko Kralj (1924), Dominik Livaković (1995), Andrej Kramarić (1991), Tonči Gabrić (1961), and Danijel Pranjić (1981).