SOCCER PLAYER

José Luis Salgado

1966 - Today

Photo of José Luis Salgado

Icon of person José Luis Salgado

José Luis Salgado Gómez (born 3 April 1966) is a Mexican former footballer and manager. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. José Luis Salgado is the 10,491st most popular soccer player (down from 10,345th in 2019), the 574th most popular biography from Mexico (up from 598th in 2019) and the 148th most popular Mexican Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of José Luis Salgado by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, José Luis Salgado ranks 10,491 out of 21,273Before him are Ismail Matar, Liam Rosenior, Mark Paston, Moïse Brou Apanga, David Embé, and Válber Costa. After him are Sylvain N'Diaye, Flavio Zandoná, Stéphane Dalmat, Keito Nakamura, Guillermo Maripán, and Sílvio.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1966, José Luis Salgado ranks 779Before him are Sean M. Carroll, Tina Kotek, Irina Khabarova, Roman Hagara, Danny Everett, and Zita-Eva Funkenhauser. After him are Elana Meyer, Xuecheng, Karin Enström, Bill Callahan, Tadanori Koshino, and Aqeela Asifi.

Others Born in 1966

Go to all Rankings

In Mexico

Among people born in Mexico, José Luis Salgado ranks 574 out of 729Before him are Patricia Manterola (1972), Karyme Lozano (1978), Francisco Javier Rodríguez (1981), César Arturo Ramos (1983), Hugo Ayala (1987), and Marco Fabián (1989). After him are Bernardo Segura (1970), Irán Castillo (1977), Yalitza Aparicio (1993), Leonardo López Luján (1964), Henry Martín (1992), and Ana Guevara (1977).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Mexico

Among soccer players born in Mexico, José Luis Salgado ranks 148Before him are Francisco Javier Cruz (1966), Ramón Morales (1975), Jesús Manuel Corona (1993), Francisco Javier Rodríguez (1981), Hugo Ayala (1987), and Marco Fabián (1989). After him are Henry Martín (1992), Carlos Salcedo (1993), José de Jesús Corona (1981), Juan Carlos Chávez (1967), Joaquín del Olmo (1969), and Salvador Carmona (1975).