SOCCER PLAYER

Kirill Nababkin

1986 - Today

Photo of Kirill Nababkin

Icon of person Kirill Nababkin

Kirill Anatolyevich Nababkin (Russian: Кирилл Анатольевич Набабкин; born 8 September 1986) is a Russian football player who plays for Media Football League side SKA Rostov-on-Don. He mostly plays at centre-back position, but also played as a left-back or right-back in the past. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Kirill Nababkin is the 13,146th most popular soccer player (down from 11,325th in 2019), the 3,234th most popular biography from Russia (down from 3,148th in 2019) and the 162nd most popular Russian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Kirill Nababkin by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Kirill Nababkin ranks 13,146 out of 21,273Before him are Ryu Saito, Yohann Pelé, Emilio Izaguirre, Shinji Jojo, Roberto Insigne, and Jaka Bijol. After him are Vivianne Miedema, Jim Holton, Tamir Cohen, Alex Sandro da Silva, Rubén Yáñez, and Jaume Doménech.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, Kirill Nababkin ranks 852Before him are Lena Goeßling, Jempy Drucker, Teppei Koike, Christine Evangelista, Alba Cabello, and Emilio Izaguirre. After him are T. J. Oshie, Andrei Volokitin, Takayuki Seto, Dana, Novica Veličković, and Juliano Mineiro.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Kirill Nababkin ranks 3,234 out of 3,761Before him are Ivan Skobrev (1983), Alexander Zelenko (1871), Ksenia Pervak (1991), Mariya Savinova (1985), Alexander Semin (1984), and Tatiana Panova (1976). After him are Aleksei Alekseivich German (1976), Ekaterina Vilkova (1984), Tamilla Abbasova (1982), Yelena Grigoryeva (1978), Grigoriy Dobrygin (1986), and Alexander Bolshunov (1996).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Russia

Among soccer players born in Russia, Kirill Nababkin ranks 162Before him are Fedor Černych (1991), Vladimir Tatarchuk (1966), Igor Yanovsky (1974), Ivan Saenko (1983), Yury Gazinsky (1989), and Magomed Ozdoyev (1992). After him are Ruslan Pimenov (1981), Roman Adamov (1982), Vyacheslav Dayev (1972), Oleg Ivanov (1986), Vladimir Maminov (1974), and Dmitri Sennikov (1976).