SOCCER PLAYER

Manuel Pablo

1976 - Today

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Manuel Pablo García Díaz (born 25 January 1976), known as Manuel Pablo, is a Spanish retired professional footballer who played mainly as a right-back. He is currently manager of Deportivo Fabril. He spent most of his career with Deportivo, appearing in 482 official matches and notably winning the 1999–2000 La Liga. With stamina as his main asset, he also represented Spain on 13 occasions. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Manuel Pablo is the 7,851st most popular soccer player (down from 7,131st in 2019), the 2,230th most popular biography from Spain (down from 2,196th in 2019) and the 517th most popular Spanish Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Manuel Pablo ranks 7,851 out of 21,273Before him are Atsuto Uchida, Pablo Ibáñez, Felipe Santana, Gonzalo García, Tim Sparv, and Fathi Kameel. After him are Youssouf Fofana, Lima, Wilmar Cabrera, Hiromi Kojima, Erik Edman, and Bryan Cristante.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1976, Manuel Pablo ranks 461Before him are Zoran Pavlović, Takashi Fukunishi, Caçapa, John Aloisi, Jawhar Mnari, and Gigi Leung. After him are Nicolás Lapentti, Zoltán Almási, Danzel, Jiří Štajner, Rochelle Aytes, and Amaia Montero.

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In Spain

Among people born in Spain, Manuel Pablo ranks 2,230 out of 3,355Before him are Markel Susaeta (1987), Màrius Serra (1963), Pablo Ibáñez (1981), Carlos Costa (1968), Adriana Ugarte (1985), and Gonzalo García (2004). After him are Magdalena Álvarez (1952), Julen Aguinagalde (1982), Teresa Forcades (1966), Amaia Montero (1976), Verónica Echegui (1983), and Rubén Iván Martínez (1984).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Spain

Among soccer players born in Spain, Manuel Pablo ranks 517Before him are Sergi Samper (1995), Javier Portillo (1982), Nico Paz (2004), Markel Susaeta (1987), Pablo Ibáñez (1981), and Gonzalo García (2004). After him are Rubén Iván Martínez (1984), José Francisco Molina (1970), David Aganzo (1981), Pau López (1994), Santi Denia (1974), and Pablo Maqueda (1971).