SOCCER PLAYER

Jozef Štibrányi

1940 - Today

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Jozef Štibrányi (born 11 January 1940 in Vlčkovce) is a former Slovak football player. He is nicknamed Vasil. During his club career he mostly played for FC Spartak Trnava. He earned 9 caps for the Czechoslovakia national football team, and was part of the second-placed team at the 1962 FIFA World Cup, where he scored one goal. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jozef Štibrányi is the 2,719th most popular soccer player (up from 3,954th in 2019), the 177th most popular biography from Slovakia (up from 213th in 2019) and the 34th most popular Slovak Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Jozef Štibrányi ranks 2,719 out of 21,273Before him are Willibald Schmaus, Fernando Riera, Giovanni Viola, Abel Braga, Joaquín Vázquez, and Hwang Sun-hong. After him are Milivoje Novaković, Victor Ferreyra, Abdulah Gegić, Miguel Oviedo, Yasuhiro Toyoda, and Rudolf Gramlich.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1940, Jozef Štibrányi ranks 356Before him are Ole Ernst, Bill Medley, Michael Ruse, Władysław Komar, Ignacio Milam Tang, and Jerzy Kulej. After him are Osamu Watanabe, Warren Cole, Donald Wuerl, Werner Krämer, Bohdan Paczyński, and Jean-Paul Proust.

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In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Jozef Štibrányi ranks 177 out of 418Before him are Peter Sagan (1990), Janko Alexy (1894), Peter Michal Bohúň (1822), Ferenc Sidó (1923), Martin Škrtel (1984), and Martin Benka (1888). After him are Lukáš Hrádecký (1989), Ján Cikker (1911), Jozef Murgaš (1864), Jozef Čapkovič (1948), Karol Jokl (1945), and Béla Illés (1895).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Slovakia

Among soccer players born in Slovakia, Jozef Štibrányi ranks 34Before him are Jozef Barmoš (1954), Ladislav Kuna (1947), Ladislav Jurkemik (1953), Marek Špilár (1975), Andrei Glanzmann (1907), and Martin Škrtel (1984). After him are Lukáš Hrádecký (1989), Jozef Čapkovič (1948), Karol Jokl (1945), Ladislav Pavlovič (1926), Milan Škriniar (1995), and Anton Moravčík (1931).