SOCCER PLAYER

Kazuyoshi Nakamura

1955 - Today

Photo of Kazuyoshi Nakamura

Icon of person Kazuyoshi Nakamura

Kazuyoshi Nakamura (中村 一義, Nakamura Kazuyoshi; born April 8, 1955) is a former Japanese football player. He played for Japan national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Kazuyoshi Nakamura is the 965th most popular soccer player (down from 355th in 2019), the 775th most popular biography from Japan (down from 353rd in 2019) and the 185th most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Kazuyoshi Nakamura by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Kazuyoshi Nakamura ranks 965 out of 21,273Before him are Álvaro Recoba, Bernard Vukas, Andrej Kvašňák, Waldemar de Brito, Francesco Toldo, and Edmundo Suárez. After him are Slava Metreveli, Ferran Olivella, Roberto Cherro, Christoph Daum, Bruno Metsu, and Akira Matsunaga.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1955, Kazuyoshi Nakamura ranks 142Before him are Sirindhorn, Andreas Gursky, Matti Vanhanen, Kevin Peter Hall, Gloria Guida, and Anton Corbijn. After him are Jean-Hugues Anglade, David Axelrod, Daniel Bertoni, Kim Hae-sook, James Gosling, and Zbigniew Preisner.

Others Born in 1955

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Kazuyoshi Nakamura ranks 775 out of 6,245Before him are Kakinomoto no Hitomaro (662), Daidō Moriyama (1938), Soga no Umako (551), Prince Kan'in Kotohito (1865), Satoru Nakajima (1953), and Itagaki Taisuke (1837). After him are Shigenori Tōgō (1882), Yamada Nagamasa (1590), Akira Matsunaga (1948), Hayashi Razan (1583), Atsushi Nakajima (1909), and Shinichi Suzuki (1898).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Kazuyoshi Nakamura ranks 185Before him are Toshio Takabayashi (1953), Tsutomu Sonobe (1958), Kazumi Tsubota (1956), Toyohito Mochizuki (1953), Nobuko Kondo (1956), and Masateru Akita (1982). After him are Akira Matsunaga (1948), Mitsunori Fujiguchi (1949), Takeshi Ono (1944), Mitsuo Kato (1953), Yuji Kishioku (1954), and Sanae Mishima (1957).