SOCCER PLAYER

Karel Rada

1971 - Today

Photo of Karel Rada

Icon of person Karel Rada

Karel Rada (born 2 March 1971) is a Czech former professional footballer who played as a defender. He played Dukla Prague, Slavia Prague, Sigma Olomouc, Teplice, Trabzonspor and Eintracht Frankfurt. At international level, Rada played for the Czech Republic, for which he played 43 matches and scored four goals. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Karel Rada is the 8,559th most popular soccer player (down from 7,667th in 2019), the 914th most popular biography from Czechia (down from 889th in 2019) and the 146th most popular Czech Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Karel Rada by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Karel Rada ranks 8,559 out of 21,273Before him are Daniel Caligiuri, Vadym Tyshchenko, Aurélien Chedjou, Krste Velkoski, Luis Tejada, and Ali Mabkhout. After him are Katsuya Senzaki, Alexey Smertin, Sissi, Mana Nakao, Nordi Mukiele, and Aleksandar Prijović.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1971, Karel Rada ranks 616Before him are Robert da Silva Almeida, Artūras Karnišovas, Miran Pavlin, Raül Romeva, José María Jiménez, and Kiran Desai. After him are Leslie Benzies, Will Hunt, Calogero, Michael von der Heide, Juan Garaizabal, and Dorian Gregory.

Others Born in 1971

Go to all Rankings

In Czechia

Among people born in Czechia, Karel Rada ranks 914 out of 1,200Before him are Robert Lang (1970), Václav Pilař (1988), Robert Reichel (1971), Alex Baumann (1964), Jakub Jankto (1996), and Patrik Eliáš (1976). After him are Vladimír Darida (1990), Filip Bandžak (1983), František Rajtoral (1986), Filip Jícha (1982), Jorge Luis Pila (1972), and Martin Müller (1970).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Czechia

Among soccer players born in Czechia, Karel Rada ranks 146Before him are Jiří Jarošík (1977), Jan Laštůvka (1982), Petr Rada (1958), Loukas Vyntra (1981), Václav Pilař (1988), and Jakub Jankto (1996). After him are Vladimír Darida (1990), František Rajtoral (1986), Martin Müller (1970), Ladislav Maier (1966), Pavel Hapal (1969), and Pavel Mareš (1976).