SOCCER PLAYER

Luis Rubiños

1940 - Today

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Luis Rubiños Cerna (born December 31, 1940) is a former Peruvian football goalkeeper, who played for the Peru national team between 1963 and 1972, gaining 38 caps. He was part of the Peru squad for the 1970 World Cup. At club level, Rubiños spent most of his career at Sporting Cristal. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Luis Rubiños is the 5,538th most popular soccer player (down from 5,091st in 2019), the 167th most popular biography from Peru (down from 161st in 2019) and the 39th most popular Peruvian Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Luis Rubiños ranks 5,538 out of 21,273Before him are Shuta Takahashi, Joël Matip, Leonardo Spinazzola, Fábio Simplício, Wilfried Gröbner, and Boris Kuznetsov. After him are Katsuo Kanda, Diego Carlos, Kota Minami, Momčilo Đokić, Petr Němec, and Salvador Reyes Monteón.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1940, Luis Rubiños ranks 544Before him are Padma Sachdev, Viktor Kuzkin, Thomas M. Disch, Ugo Colombo, Arthur Alexander, and Daniel J. Travanti. After him are Bjarne Andersson, Roberto Matosas, George Adams, Jerry Lawson, Kiyoshi Tanabe, and Mario Velarde.

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In Peru

Among people born in Peru, Luis Rubiños ranks 167 out of 287Before him are Manuel María Ponce Brousset (1874), David Samanez Ocampo (1866), Mercedes Aráoz (1961), Alejandro Villanueva (1908), Arturo Fernández Meyzán (1906), and Nathalie Kelley (1985). After him are César Cueto (1952), Yehude Simon (1947), Luis Cruzado (1941), Oswaldo Ramírez (1947), Nicolás Fuentes (1941), and Rubén Toribio Díaz (1952).

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Peru

Among soccer players born in Peru, Luis Rubiños ranks 39Before him are Ottorino Sartor (1945), Julio Lores (1908), José María Lavalle (1902), Jorge Sarmiento (1900), Alejandro Villanueva (1908), and Arturo Fernández Meyzán (1906). After him are César Cueto (1952), Luis Cruzado (1941), Oswaldo Ramírez (1947), Nicolás Fuentes (1941), Rubén Toribio Díaz (1952), and Juan Carlos Oblitas (1951).