SOCCER PLAYER

Kamaldeen Sulemana

2002 - Today

Photo of Kamaldeen Sulemana

Icon of person Kamaldeen Sulemana

Kamaldeen Sulemana (born 15 February 2002), also known simply as Kamaldeen, is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a left winger or a forward for Serie A club Atalanta and the Ghana national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Kamaldeen Sulemana is the 12,996th most popular soccer player (up from 16,913th in 2019), the 100th most popular biography from Ghana (up from 132nd in 2019) and the 64th most popular Ghanaian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Kamaldeen Sulemana by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Kamaldeen Sulemana ranks 12,996 out of 21,273Before him are Du Wei, Vincent Laban, Peter Ankersen, Koichi Hashimoto, Reza Shahroudi, and Diego Mariño. After him are Mehdi Abeid, Sylvain Gbohouo, Pedro Mosquera, Alexander Jeremejeff, Asuna Tanaka, and Omar Colley.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 2002, Kamaldeen Sulemana ranks 83Before him are Tanguy Nianzou, Lady Margarita Armstrong-Jones, Fábio Silva, Cleopatra Stratan, Sebastiano Esposito, and Kenneth Taylor. After him are Arnaud Kalimuendo, Carlos Alcaraz, Alperen Şengün, Jaden Ivey, Cree Cicchino, and Benjamin Flores Jr..

Others Born in 2002

Go to all Rankings

In Ghana

Among people born in Ghana, Kamaldeen Sulemana ranks 100 out of 162Before him are Abubakari Yakubu (1981), Isaac Vorsah (1988), Alfred Duncan (1993), Eric Akoto (1980), Prince Tagoe (1986), and Frank Acheampong (1993). After him are Lawrence Ati-Zigi (1996), Peter Ofori-Quaye (1980), Emmanuel Frimpong (1992), Riga Mustapha (1981), Ama K. Abebrese (1980), and Joseph Aidoo (1995).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Ghana

Among soccer players born in Ghana, Kamaldeen Sulemana ranks 64Before him are Abubakari Yakubu (1981), Isaac Vorsah (1988), Alfred Duncan (1993), Eric Akoto (1980), Prince Tagoe (1986), and Frank Acheampong (1993). After him are Lawrence Ati-Zigi (1996), Peter Ofori-Quaye (1980), Emmanuel Frimpong (1992), Riga Mustapha (1981), Joseph Aidoo (1995), and Habib Mohamed (1983).