SOCCER PLAYER

Leonid Slutsky

1971 - Today

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Leonid Viktorovich Slutsky (Russian: Леони́д Ви́кторович Слу́цкий [ˈsɫut͡skʲɪj]; born 4 May 1971) is a Russian professional football coach and a former player who is the manager of Chinese Super League club Shanghai Shenhua. He has managed Olimpia Volgograd, Uralan Elista, Moscow, Krylia Sovetov, CSKA Moscow, Russia, Hull City, Vitesse and Rubin Kazan. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Leonid Slutsky is the 6,059th most popular soccer player (down from 4,814th in 2019), the 2,474th most popular biography from Russia (down from 2,320th in 2019) and the 78th most popular Russian Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Leonid Slutsky ranks 6,059 out of 21,273Before him are Oliver Bozanic, Marek Dziuba, Steve Sumner, Iñaki Peña, Djamel Belmadi, and Andrey Gustavo dos Santos. After him are Elvir Baljić, David Neres, Edu, Tetsuji Hashiratani, Daisuke Matsushita, and Fernando Gómez.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1971, Leonid Slutsky ranks 375Before him are Daniel Powter, Rebecca Gayheart, Nicholas Brendon, Xavier Naidoo, Megumi Sakata, and Jake Busey. After him are Tristan Taormino, Alex Borstein, Lorena Rojas, Joachim Björklund, Rosemarie DeWitt, and Noriko Sakai.

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In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Leonid Slutsky ranks 2,474 out of 3,761Before him are Valentin Kuzin (1926), Yuri Shargin (1960), El Kazovsky (1948), Yekaterina Mikhailova-Demina (1925), Pavel Antokolsky (1896), and Herman Gref (1964). After him are Yura Borisov (1992), Tatyana Dogileva (1957), Elizaveta Glinka (1962), Māra Zālīte (1952), Alex Yermolinsky (1958), and Ivan Artobolevsky (1905).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Russia

Among soccer players born in Russia, Leonid Slutsky ranks 78Before him are Aleksandr Kerzhakov (1982), Aleksandr Lenyov (1944), Yuri Falin (1937), Evgeny Lovchev (1949), Gennady Yevryuzhikhin (1944), and Viktor Shustikov (1939). After him are Aleksandr Borodyuk (1962), Nikolai Tishchenko (1926), Oleg Kopayev (1937), Aleksandr Uvarov (1960), Oleg Pashinin (1974), and Alan Dzagoev (1990).