SOCCER PLAYER

Julian Jeanvier

1992 - Today

Photo of Julian Jeanvier

Icon of person Julian Jeanvier

Julian Marc Jeanvier (born 31 March 1992) is a professional footballer who plays as a central defender for UAE First Division League club Gulf United. Born in France, he plays for the Guinea national team at international level. Jeanvier rose to prominence in his native France with Reims, before joining English club Brentford in 2018. He returned to France to join Auxerre in 2022, before returning to Turkey (where he had previously played on loan for Kasımpaşa) to join Kayserispor in 2023. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 15 different languages on Wikipedia. Julian Jeanvier is the 20,727th most popular soccer player (down from 15,582nd in 2024), the 7,172nd most popular biography from France (down from 6,500th in 2019) and the 1,058th most popular French Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Julian Jeanvier by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Julian Jeanvier ranks 20,727 out of 21,273Before him are Hiroaki Okuno, Samúel Friðjónsson, Markus Schubert, Shogo Onishi, Kotaro Omori, and Jair Céspedes. After him are Ben Hamer, Josip Mišić, Juan Carlos, Carlos Baleba, Michael Parkhurst, and Andrey Harbunow.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1992, Julian Jeanvier ranks 1,367Before him are Felipe Wu, Tatjana Pinto, Sandrine Mainville, Marharyta Makhneva, Rémi Mulumba, and Kotaro Omori. After him are Raven Goodwin, Mariana Larroquette, Andrey Melnichenko, Jan Hojer, Mohammad Reza Khanzadeh, and Sui Lu.

Others Born in 1992

Go to all Rankings

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In France

Among soccer players born in France, Julian Jeanvier ranks 1,058Before him are Melvin Bard (2000), Adrien Hunou (1994), Jordan Lotiès (1984), Wesley Lautoa (1987), Claude Gonçalves (1994), and Rémi Mulumba (1992). After him are Dimitry Bertaud (1998), Wilson Odobert (2004), Frédéric Mendy (1988), Ismaël Doukouré (2003), Soni Mustivar (1990), and Zaydou Youssouf (1999).