SOCCER PLAYER

José Luis Sierra

1968 - Today

Photo of José Luis Sierra

Icon of person José Luis Sierra

José Luis "Coto" Sierra Pando (born 5 December 1968) is a Chilean football coach and former player. Playing in the midfield, he retired in 2009, and one year later he became the coach of his long-time team Unión Española. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. José Luis Sierra is the 7,640th most popular soccer player (down from 4,688th in 2019), the 224th most popular biography from Chile (down from 163rd in 2019) and the 103rd most popular Chilean Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of José Luis Sierra by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, José Luis Sierra ranks 7,640 out of 21,273Before him are Pável Pardo, Jordan Veretout, Gleison Bremer, Pablo Contreras, Radek Drulák, and Shun Kumagai. After him are Tomislav Butina, Alexander Nübel, Elzo Coelho, Vassilios Tsiartas, Heimo Pfeifenberger, and Peter Etebo.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1968, José Luis Sierra ranks 545Before him are Fatou Diome, William Regal, Olaf Lubaszenko, Rashid Khan, Mehmet Akif Pirim, and Anthony E. Zuiker. After him are Jeff VanderMeer, James Toney, Reinaldo Vicente Simão, Cheryl Strayed, Patrick Gallagher, and Michael Herbig.

Others Born in 1968

Go to all Rankings

In Chile

Among people born in Chile, José Luis Sierra ranks 224 out of 321Before him are Lizardo Garrido (1957), Rafael González (1950), Jean Beausejour (1984), Mauricio Pinilla (1984), Nelson Tapia (1966), and Pablo Contreras (1978). After him are Juan Machuca (1951), Oscar Wirth (1955), Miguel Ángel Gamboa (1951), Rodrigo Tello (1979), Enzo Escobar (1951), and Claudio Miranda (1972).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Chile

Among soccer players born in Chile, José Luis Sierra ranks 103Before him are Lizardo Garrido (1957), Rafael González (1950), Jean Beausejour (1984), Mauricio Pinilla (1984), Nelson Tapia (1966), and Pablo Contreras (1978). After him are Juan Machuca (1951), Oscar Wirth (1955), Miguel Ángel Gamboa (1951), Rodrigo Tello (1979), Enzo Escobar (1951), and Humberto Suazo (1981).