SOCCER PLAYER

Karlo Bartolec

1995 - Today

Photo of Karlo Bartolec

Icon of person Karlo Bartolec

Karlo Bartolec (Croatian pronunciation: [kâːrlo bǎrtolets]; born 20 April 1995) is a Croatian footballer who plays as a defender for Astana. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 18 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 17 in 2024). Karlo Bartolec is the 21,925th most popular soccer player (down from 15,596th in 2024), the 776th most popular biography from Croatia (down from 648th in 2019) and the 257th most popular Croatian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Karlo Bartolec by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Karlo Bartolec ranks 21,925 out of 21,273Before him are Naoki Kawaguchi, Kento Shiratani, Andrew Mwesigwa, Shuto Suzuki, Takayuki Fukumura, and Idriz Voca. After him are Hideyuki Nozawa, Toyofumi Sakano, Frode Kippe, Sydney Leroux, Akira Ibayashi, and Fábio Aguiar.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1995, Karlo Bartolec ranks 1,124Before him are Ryan Gauld, Laura Müller, Paul Arriola, Martha Bayona, Jang Su-jeong, and Nina Betschart. After him are Astra Sharma, Jannik Kohlbacher, Romain Gall, Murodjon Yuldoshev, Amos Mosaner, and Yuta Togashi.

Others Born in 1995

Go to all Rankings

In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Karlo Bartolec ranks 776 out of 700Before him are Fran Tudor (1995), Franko Andrijašević (1991), Luka Vušković (2007), Luka Šamanić (2000), Miran Maričić (1997), and Dino Perić (1994). After him are Lovro Zvonarek (2005), Nino Galović (1992), Luka Bukić (1994), Ivan Trajkovič (1991), Stipe Plazibat (1989), and Jozo Šimunović (1994).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Croatia

Among soccer players born in Croatia, Karlo Bartolec ranks 257Before him are Josip Mišić (1994), Mate Maleš (1989), Fran Tudor (1995), Franko Andrijašević (1991), Luka Vušković (2007), and Dino Perić (1994). After him are Lovro Zvonarek (2005), Nino Galović (1992), Stipe Plazibat (1989), Jozo Šimunović (1994), Robert Murić (1996), and Tomislav Kiš (1994).