SOCCER PLAYER

Mahmoud El Khatib

1954 - Today

Photo of Mahmoud El Khatib

Icon of person Mahmoud El Khatib

Mahmoud Ibrahim Ibrahim El Khatib (Arabic: محمود إبراهيم إبراهيم الخطيب; born 30 October 1954), popularly nicknamed Bibo (Arabic: بيبو), is an Egyptian retired footballer and current President of Al Ahly. He is considered as one of the best forwards in the history of African football. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mahmoud El Khatib is the 2,369th most popular soccer player (down from 1,797th in 2019), the 474th most popular biography from Egypt (down from 452nd in 2019) and the 5th most popular Egyptian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mahmoud El Khatib by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Mahmoud El Khatib ranks 2,369 out of 21,273Before him are Murat Yakin, Martin Hoffmann, Sergio Valdés, Piero Pasinati, Djamel Menad, and Giorgos Karagounis. After him are Karl Stotz, Aritz Aduriz, Fernando Chalana, Kent Karlsson, Miroslav Brozović, and Carlo Cudicini.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1954, Mahmoud El Khatib ranks 276Before him are François Van der Elst, Sam Allardyce, Karl-Heinz Körbel, Joseph-Antoine Bell, Dai Sijie, and Koen Lenaerts. After him are Philippa Gregory, Michael Sembello, Valery Gazzaev, Mauro Baldi, René Girard, and Mark Edmondson.

Others Born in 1954

Go to all Rankings

In Egypt

Among people born in Egypt, Mahmoud El Khatib ranks 474 out of 642Before him are Abdulrahman Fawzi (1909), Taheyya Kariokka (1915), Konstantinos Tsaldaris (1884), Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti (1754), Khenemetneferhedjet I (-1950), and Nadia Gamal (1937). After him are Safiya Zaghloul (1876), Mena Massoud (1991), Al-Wathiq I (null), Penelope Delta (1874), Julian Fellowes (1949), and Meretseger (-1850).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Egypt

Among soccer players born in Egypt, Mahmoud El Khatib ranks 5Before him are Mohamed Salah (1992), Hossam Hassan (1966), Hassan Shehata (1947), and Abdulrahman Fawzi (1909). After him are Ad-Diba (1927), Mahmoud El-Gohary (1938), Mustafa Mansour (1914), Omar Marmoush (1999), Essam El Hadary (1973), Ahmed Hassan (1975), and Mohamed Zidan (1981).