SOCCER PLAYER

Lucas Martínez Quarta

1996 - Today

Photo of Lucas Martínez Quarta

Icon of person Lucas Martínez Quarta

Lucas Martínez Quarta (born 10 May 1996) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Argentine Primera División club River Plate and the Argentina national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Lucas Martínez Quarta is the 8,856th most popular soccer player (down from 7,714th in 2019), the 804th most popular biography from Argentina (down from 790th in 2019) and the 412th most popular Argentinean Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Lucas Martínez Quarta by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Lucas Martínez Quarta ranks 8,856 out of 21,273Before him are Nadhim Shaker, Junior Messias, Nils Petersen, Eufemio Cabral, Carlos Bonet, and Ryuji Michiki. After him are Gerson, Hikaru Kuba, Moritz Leitner, Josip Pivarić, Dale Mitchell, and Igor Denisov.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1996, Lucas Martínez Quarta ranks 175Before him are Anthoine Hubert, Abdou Diallo, Toni-Ann Singh, Kenedy, Ruben Loftus-Cheek, and Sasha Pieterse. After him are Tallon Griekspoor, Milot Rashica, Ivan Toney, Lukas Klostermann, Hiroto Arai, and Pietro Fittipaldi.

Others Born in 1996

Go to all Rankings

In Argentina

Among people born in Argentina, Lucas Martínez Quarta ranks 804 out of 1,154Before him are Germán Lux (1982), Matías Emilio Delgado (1982), Javier Frana (1966), Franco Vázquez (1989), Mariano González (1981), and Fernando Moner (1967). After him are Belén Rodríguez (1984), Paulo Gazzaniga (1992), Carlos Mayor (1965), Hernán Barcos (1984), Luciana Aymar (1977), and Lali Espósito (1991).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Argentina

Among soccer players born in Argentina, Lucas Martínez Quarta ranks 412Before him are Emiliano Insúa (1989), Germán Lux (1982), Matías Emilio Delgado (1982), Franco Vázquez (1989), Mariano González (1981), and Fernando Moner (1967). After him are Paulo Gazzaniga (1992), Carlos Mayor (1965), Hernán Barcos (1984), Jesús Dátolo (1984), Mauro Rosales (1981), and Diego Buonanotte (1988).