SOCCER PLAYER

Kazuto Saiki

1970 - Today

Photo of Kazuto Saiki

Icon of person Kazuto Saiki

Kazuto Saiki is a soccer player born in 1970 in , which is now part of modern day Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan. Kazuto Saiki is currently 55 years old.

Her biography is available in 21 different languages on Wikipedia. Kazuto Saiki is the 8,851st most popular soccer player (up from 13,505th in 2024), the 2,722nd most popular biography from Japan (up from 2,975th in 2019) and the 1,073rd most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Kazuto Saiki by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Kazuto Saiki ranks 8,849 out of 21,273Before her are Heidi Mohr, Marek Ostrowski, Emiliano Moretti, and Gilberto Martínez. After her are Georgi Yordanov, Guilherme Siqueira, Marc Wilson, Ariza Makukula, Roberto Trashorras, Jean-Jacques Tizié, Arnau Tenas, and Patrick van Aanholt.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1970, Kazuto Saiki ranks 691Before her are Angelica Agurbash, Michel van der Aa, Mahmut Demir, Anna Kinberg Batra, Inspectah Deck, and Zbigniew Ziobro. After her are Marina Lobatch, Monique Gabriela Curnen, Gianluca Ramazzotti, Eluana Englaro, Natalia Mishkutionok, and Alexei Zhamnov.

Others Born in 1970

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Kazuto Saiki ranks 2,728 out of 6,245Before her are Atsushi Yoneyama (1976), Kyo (1976), Mike Havenaar (1987), Yoshimasa Hosoya (1982), Eiji Sato (1971), Hiroshi Tamaki (1980), Hiroshi Sowa (1956), Nobunaga Shimazaki (1988), Kazuhiro Murata (1969), Kenichi Nozawa (1984), Taro Yamamoto (1974), and Shizuka Itō (1980).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Kazuto Saiki ranks 1,073Before her are Atsushi Yoneyama (1976), Mike Havenaar (1987), Eiji Sato (1971), Hiroshi Sowa (1956), Kazuhiro Murata (1969), and Kenichi Nozawa (1984). After her are Naoki Sakai (1975), Mikihito Arai (1994), Yuji Iida (1992), Jun Suzuki (1961), Shuta Sonoda (1969), and Yoji Sakai (1977).