SOCCER PLAYER

Marco Giampaolo

1967 - Today

Photo of Marco Giampaolo

Icon of person Marco Giampaolo

Marco Giampaolo (Italian pronunciation: [ˈmarko dʒamˈpaːolo]; born 2 August 1967) is an Italian football manager and former professional player who played as a midfielder. He was most recently the head coach of Serie A club Lecce. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Marco Giampaolo is the 4,541st most popular soccer player (up from 4,921st in 2019), the 610th most popular biography from Switzerland (up from 635th in 2019) and the 49th most popular Swiss Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Marco Giampaolo by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Marco Giampaolo ranks 4,541 out of 21,273Before him are Jan Jönsson, Horace Bailey, Josip Iličić, Axel, Obafemi Martins, and Tim Borowski. After him are Karim Adeyemi, Nilmar, Tommy Docherty, Holger Hieronymus, Zygmunt Anczok, and Maouhoub Ghazouani.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1967, Marco Giampaolo ranks 290Before him are Gaston Browne, Álex Pina, Timur Vermes, Yoko Shimomura, José Padilha, and Dana Ashbrook. After him are Masami Ihara, Melora Hardin, Sharleen Spiteri, Uche Okechukwu, Nathalie Tauziat, and Leonidas Kavakos.

Others Born in 1967

Go to all Rankings

In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Marco Giampaolo ranks 610 out of 1,015Before him are Diogo Costa (1999), Albert Scherrer (1908), Denis Oswald (1947), René-Pierre Quentin (1943), Erika Hess (1962), and Urs Bühler (1971). After him are Oswald Zappelli (1913), Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker (1939), Alain Geiger (1960), Georges Stuber (1925), Edy Reinalter (1920), and George Gruntz (1932).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Switzerland

Among soccer players born in Switzerland, Marco Giampaolo ranks 49Before him are Ricardo Rodríguez (1992), Kurt Stettler (1932), Kubilay Türkyilmaz (1967), Johann Vogel (1977), Diogo Costa (1999), and René-Pierre Quentin (1943). After him are Alain Geiger (1960), Georges Stuber (1925), Fabio Celestini (1975), Diego Benaglio (1983), Jean Tamini (1919), and Adolphe Hug (1923).