SOCCER PLAYER

Karim Hafez

1996 - Today

Photo of Karim Hafez

Icon of person Karim Hafez

Karim Hafez Ramadan Seifeldin (Arabic: كَرِيم حَافِظ رَمَضَان سَيْف الدِّين; born 12 March 1996) is an Egyptian professional footballer who plays for Egyptian Premier League club Pyramids and the Egyptian national team as a left-back. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 15 different languages on Wikipedia. Karim Hafez is the 20,217th most popular soccer player (down from 17,465th in 2024), the 680th most popular biography from Egypt (down from 649th in 2019) and the 80th most popular Egyptian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Karim Hafez by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Karim Hafez ranks 20,217 out of 21,273Before her are Willian Popp, Masaki Watanabe, Sydney Lohmann, Chencho Gyeltshen, Felix Klaus, and Manu García. After her are Georgios Masouras, Cyrille Bayala, Osinachi Ohale, Mikhail Sivakow, Masato Fujita, and Deives Thiago.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1996, Karim Hafez ranks 847Before her are Alexis Ren, Aníta Hinriksdóttir, Maxwell Jacob Friedman, Sinan Kurt, Eddie Dunbar, and Chencho Gyeltshen. After her are Cyrille Bayala, Junior Ajayi, Ivan Šunjić, Adrian Grbić, Yoon Chae-kyung, and Cathelijn Peeters.

Others Born in 1996

Go to all Rankings

In Egypt

Among people born in Egypt, Karim Hafez ranks 680 out of 642Before her are Karim Handawy (1988), Mohamed Safwat (1990), Hamdy Fathy (1994), Deng Wei (null), Saleh Gomaa (1993), and Mohamed Ibrahim El-Sayed (1998). After her are Ibrahim Adel (2001), Amr El Solia (1990), Mohamed El-Sayed (2003), Hadia Hosny (1988), Tatiana Rentería (2000), and Abeer Abdelrahman (1992).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Egypt

Among soccer players born in Egypt, Karim Hafez ranks 80Before her are Mahmoud Hamdy (1995), Emam Ashour (1998), Mohamed Abdelmonem (1999), Ali Ghazal (1992), Hamdy Fathy (1994), and Saleh Gomaa (1993). After her are Ibrahim Adel (2001), Amr El Solia (1990), Akram Tawfik (1997), Salah Mohsen (1998), Ahmed Fathy (1993), and Taher Mohamed (1997).