SOCCER PLAYER

Jakub Sylvestr

1989 - Today

Photo of Jakub Sylvestr

Icon of person Jakub Sylvestr

Jakub Sylvestr (born 2 February 1989) is a Slovak professional footballer who plays as a forward for MFK Zvolen. He made six appearances for the Slovakia national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 20 different languages on Wikipedia. Jakub Sylvestr is the 13,207th most popular soccer player (down from 12,260th in 2024), the 380th most popular biography from Slovakia (down from 357th in 2019) and the 99th most popular Slovak Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Jakub Sylvestr by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Jakub Sylvestr ranks 13,207 out of 21,273Before him are Edwin Cardona, Łukasz Szukała, Oswaldo Vizcarrondo, Hitoshi Morishita, André Biyogo Poko, and Abdallah El Said. After him are Christopher Samba, Satoshi Mashimo, Franck Atsou, Tony Vairelles, Eric Eichmann, and Nacho Novo.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1989, Jakub Sylvestr ranks 701Before him are Ryan Bailey, Saša Čađo, Li Chao, Yuichi Maruyama, Synnøve Solemdal, and Teddy Tamgho. After him are George Hotz, Nathan Júnior, Jelle Vossen, Danny Latza, Grzegorz Sandomierski, and Nilson Ricardo da Silva Júnior.

Others Born in 1989

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Jakub Sylvestr ranks 380 out of 418Before him are Michal Mertiňák (1979), Alexandra Borbély (1986), Andrej Karpathy (1986), Stanislav Varga (1972), Viktória Kužmová (1998), and Ľuboš Kamenár (1987). After him are Martin Velits (1985), Richard Lintner (1977), Marek Svatoš (1982), Peter Škantár (1982), Martin Valjent (1995), and Ján Laco (1981).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Slovakia

Among soccer players born in Slovakia, Jakub Sylvestr ranks 99Before him are Vladimír Janočko (1976), Norbert Gyömbér (1992), Tamás Priskin (1986), Patrik Hrošovský (1992), Stanislav Varga (1972), and Ľuboš Kamenár (1987). After him are Martin Valjent (1995), Marián Kelemen (1979), Ján Novota (1983), Jozef Gašpar (1977), Ľubomír Šatka (1995), and Dušan Kuciak (1985).