SOCCER PLAYER

Jozef Gašpar

1977 - Today

Photo of Jozef Gašpar

Icon of person Jozef Gašpar

Jozef Gašpar (Hungarian: József Gáspár) (born 23 August 1977 in Rožňava) is a retired professional Slovak football player of Hungarian ethnicity. He last played for Vasas. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jozef Gašpar is the 13,447th most popular soccer player (up from 16,092nd in 2019), the 371st most popular biography from Slovakia (up from 399th in 2019) and the 99th most popular Slovak Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Jozef Gašpar by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Jozef Gašpar ranks 13,447 out of 21,273Before him are Danilo Turcios, Luis Chávez, Renan Bressan, Makoto Kitano, Walter Henrique de Oliveira, and Takanori Nunobe. After him are James Tavernier, Tobias Sana, Bruno Correa, Toshiyuki Abe, Marcus Rohdén, and Lucas Tousart.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1977, Jozef Gašpar ranks 962Before him are Bogdan Mara, Muamer Vugdalić, Shinichi Kawaguchi, Hina Rabbani Khar, Tatsuomi Koishi, and Mikhail Ivanov. After him are Ricardo Cavalcante Ribeiro, Gavin DeGraw, Ismael Ruiz, Keita Kanemoto, Koji Nakajima, and Maria Van Kerkhove.

Others Born in 1977

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Jozef Gašpar ranks 371 out of 418Before him are Ján Laco (1981), Jaroslav Halák (1985), Marián Kelemen (1979), Tomáš Kopecký (1982), Július Hudáček (1988), and Ján Novota (1983). After him are Ľubomír Šatka (1995), Dušan Kuciak (1985), Tomáš Tatar (1990), László Bénes (1997), Milan Bartovič (1981), and Jana Čepelová (1993).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Slovakia

Among soccer players born in Slovakia, Jozef Gašpar ranks 99Before him are Stanislav Varga (1972), Ľuboš Kamenár (1987), Jakub Sylvestr (1989), Martin Valjent (1995), Marián Kelemen (1979), and Ján Novota (1983). After him are Ľubomír Šatka (1995), Dušan Kuciak (1985), László Bénes (1997), Tomáš Suslov (2002), Marek Bakoš (1983), and Dušan Perniš (1984).