HOCKEY PLAYER

Magnus Johansson

1973 - Today

Photo of Magnus Johansson

Icon of person Magnus Johansson

Magnus "Mange" Johansson (born 4 September 1973), is a Swedish former professional ice hockey player. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 15 different languages on Wikipedia. Magnus Johansson is the 293rd most popular hockey player, the 1,562nd most popular biography from Sweden (up from 1,586th in 2019) and the 32nd most popular Swedish Hockey Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Magnus Johansson by language

Loading...

Among HOCKEY PLAYERS

Among hockey players, Magnus Johansson ranks 293 out of 676Before him are Marek Malík, Roger Johansson, Kevin Fiala, Michal Handzuš, Roman Josi, and David Aebischer. After him are Ruslan Fedotenko, Branko Radivojevič, Ville Nieminen, Ron Francis, Ronnie Sundin, and Václav Prospal.

Most Popular Hockey Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1973, Magnus Johansson ranks 931Before him are Kiran Rao, Aleksandr Pavlov, Koos Moerenhout, Valberto Amorim dos Santos, Tomas Antonelius, and Adem Bereket. After him are Eddie Steeples, Thomas Ebert, Diana Hayden, Will Robson Emilio Andrade, Raza Jaffrey, and Camilla Andersen.

Others Born in 1973

Go to all Rankings

In Sweden

Among people born in Sweden, Magnus Johansson ranks 1,562 out of 1,879Before him are Eva Lund (1971), Cecilia Wikström (1965), Per Nilsson (1982), Marcus Hellner (1985), Jan Johansen (1966), and Tomas Antonelius (1973). After him are Dalibor Doder (1979), Kim Andersson (1982), Claudia Galli (1978), Karl-Johan Johnsson (1990), Anthony Elanga (2002), and Kristoffer Nordfeldt (1989).

Among HOCKEY PLAYERS In Sweden

Among hockey players born in Sweden, Magnus Johansson ranks 32Before him are Joel Lundqvist (1982), Kenny Jönsson (1974), Niklas Kronwall (1981), Fredrik Modin (1974), Tomas Holmström (1973), and Roger Johansson (1967). After him are Ronnie Sundin (1970), Linus Omark (1987), Patric Kjellberg (1969), Mikael Samuelsson (1976), Daniel Tjärnqvist (1976), and P. J. Axelsson (1975).