SOCCER PLAYER

Louay Chanko

1979 - Today

Photo of Louay Chanko

Icon of person Louay Chanko

Louay Chanko (Arabic: لؤي شنكو; born 29 November 1979) is a professional football coach and former player. Born in Sweden, Chanko represented Sweden internationally as a midfielder, before switching allegiance to Syria. After his playing career, Chanko has worked as a coach. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Louay Chanko is the 10,980th most popular soccer player (down from 10,602nd in 2019), the 1,483rd most popular biography from Sweden (up from 1,505th in 2019) and the 239th most popular Swedish Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Louay Chanko by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Louay Chanko ranks 10,980 out of 21,273Before him are Leonardo González, Celso Vieira, Ádám Bogdán, Tomasz Kłos, Logan Bailly, and Naoko Kawakami. After him are João Carlos Pinto Chaves, Vladimir Manchev, Josep Martínez, Christophe Cocard, Marcel Halstenberg, and Rémy Vercoutre.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Louay Chanko ranks 766Before him are Teruki Tabata, Staņislavs Olijars, Matthias Kessler, Anne McClain, Lauris Reiniks, and Eliezer Yudkowsky. After him are Simone Hauswald, Derek Trucks, Chamillionaire, Danilo Gabriel de Andrade, Liu Xia, and Danny Fonseca.

Others Born in 1979

Go to all Rankings

In Sweden

Among people born in Sweden, Louay Chanko ranks 1,483 out of 1,879Before him are Rasmus Lindgren (1984), Robin Stjernberg (1991), Niklas Kronwall (1981), Nooshi Dadgostar (1985), Anel Ahmedhodžić (1999), and Jörgen Pettersson (1975). After him are Jonas Källman (1981), Fredrik Modin (1974), Saman Ghoddos (1993), Cathrine Lindahl (1970), Ola Salo (1977), and Tomas Holmström (1973).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Sweden

Among soccer players born in Sweden, Louay Chanko ranks 239Before him are Alexander Farnerud (1984), Michael Svensson (1975), Gustav Svensson (1987), Rasmus Lindgren (1984), Anel Ahmedhodžić (1999), and Jörgen Pettersson (1975). After him are Saman Ghoddos (1993), Samuel Armenteros (1990), John Alvbåge (1982), Milan Smiljanić (1986), Per Nilsson (1982), and Tomas Antonelius (1973).