SOCCER PLAYER

José Fernández

1939 - Today

Photo of José Fernández

Icon of person José Fernández

José Fernández Santini (born February 14, 1939) is a former Peruvian football defender, who played for the Peru national football team between 1959 and 1973, gaining 37 caps and scoring 2 goals. He was part of the Peru squad for the 1970 World Cup. At club level, Fernández played for Universitario and Defensor Lima. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. José Fernández is the 7,475th most popular soccer player (down from 5,405th in 2019), the 207th most popular biography from Peru (down from 174th in 2019) and the 70th most popular Peruvian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of José Fernández by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, José Fernández ranks 7,475 out of 21,273Before him are José Holebas, Mun In-guk, Naoto Otake, Tomáš Řepka, Alex Chandre de Oliveira, and Kevin Kampl. After him are Leo Van der Elst, Kenichi Shimokawa, Moussa Diaby, Jaroslav Drobný, Odisseas Vlachodimos, and Tim de Cler.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1939, José Fernández ranks 620Before him are Barbara Bosson, Willye White, Maury Povich, Barry Cunliffe, David Allan Coe, and BarBara Luna. After him are Ernie Davis, Lino Brocka, Leon Brittan, Tom Harkin, George M. Whitesides, and Peter Radford.

Others Born in 1939

Go to all Rankings

In Peru

Among people born in Peru, José Fernández ranks 207 out of 287Before him are Claudia Llosa (1976), José Velásquez (1952), Salvador Salguero (1951), José Navarro (1948), Roberto Palacios (1972), and Edwin Uehara (1969). After him are Cecilia Tait (1962), Roberto Rojas (1955), Ernesto Labarthe (1956), Carlos I. Noriega (1959), Óscar Arizaga (1957), and Harald Helfgott (1977).

Others born in Peru

Go to all Rankings

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Peru

Among soccer players born in Peru, José Fernández ranks 70Before him are Juan Manuel Vargas (1983), José Velásquez (1952), Salvador Salguero (1951), José Navarro (1948), Roberto Palacios (1972), and Edwin Uehara (1969). After him are Roberto Rojas (1955), Ernesto Labarthe (1956), Óscar Arizaga (1957), Germán Leguía (1954), Luis Advíncula (1990), and Jorge Olaechea (1956).