SOCCER PLAYER

Maki Haneta

1972 - Today

Photo of Maki Haneta

Icon of person Maki Haneta

Maki Haneta (埴田 真紀, Haneta Maki; born 30 September 1972) is a former Japanese football player. She played for Japan national team. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Maki Haneta is the 3,623rd most popular soccer player (up from 6,337th in 2019), the 1,452nd most popular biography from Japan (up from 1,816th in 2019) and the 354th most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Maki Haneta by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Maki Haneta ranks 3,623 out of 21,273Before her are Gabriel dos Santos Magalhães, Vittore Gottardi, Luka Lipošinović, Lutz Eigendorf, Wataru Endo, and Thorgan Hazard. After her are Toshiaki Imai, Ray Wilson, Bruno Guimarães, Raúl Cárdenas, Fyodor Cherenkov, and Emil Pažický.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1972, Maki Haneta ranks 207Before her are Hera Björk, Wilson Kipketer, Leonor Varela, Kiko Loureiro, Markus Babbel, and Saffron Burrows. After her are Iván Pedroso, RedOne, Sergey Aksyonov, Chris Adler, Pedro Lamy, and Jeferson Antonio Alves Dupin.

Others Born in 1972

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Maki Haneta ranks 1,452 out of 6,245Before her are Toshiyuki Morikawa (1967), Shunpei Uto (1918), Kazuyoshi Hoshino (1947), Wataru Endo (1993), Yuji Hyakutake (1950), and Chikage Awashima (1924). After her are Toshiaki Imai (1954), Hiroshi Soejima (1959), Kenji Goto (1967), Hirofumi Nakasone (1945), Tomoya Suzuki (2000), and Osamu Chiba (1968).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Maki Haneta ranks 354Before her are Mami Kaneda (1968), Kei Sugimoto (1982), Daichi Fukushima (1977), Homare Sawa (1978), Eiichi Uemura (1975), and Wataru Endo (1993). After her are Toshiaki Imai (1954), Hiroshi Soejima (1959), Tomoya Suzuki (2000), Osamu Chiba (1968), Tomoyuki Kajino (1960), and Yohei Takayama (1979).