SOCCER PLAYER

Marco Sandy

1971 - Today

Photo of Marco Sandy

Icon of person Marco Sandy

Marco Antonio Sandy Sansusty (born 29 August 1971) is a Bolivian football manager and former player who played as a defender. He is the current assistant manager of Jorge Wilstermann. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Marco Sandy is the 9,959th most popular soccer player (up from 10,299th in 2019), the 94th most popular biography from Bolivia (up from 96th in 2019) and the 28th most popular Bolivian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Marco Sandy by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Marco Sandy ranks 9,959 out of 21,273Before him are Erik Hoftun, Heinz Lindner, Des Walker, Fábio Santos, Stanislav Manolev, and Oleh Shelayev. After him are Gaëtan Englebert, Cyrille Regis, Dmitri Khokhlov, Yuki Takita, Nabil El Zhar, and Adolfo Bautista.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1971, Marco Sandy ranks 770Before him are Hansjörg Jäkle, Lee Lim-saeng, Bruce Bowen, Inesu Emiko Takeoka, Jean Galfione, and Franky Vandendriessche. After him are Svetlana Goncharenko, Wim Vansevenant, Nicoleta Grasu, Iulică Ruican, Eddie Jones, and Trond Espen Seim.

Others Born in 1971

Go to all Rankings

In Bolivia

Among people born in Bolivia, Marco Sandy ranks 94 out of 105Before him are Juan Argote (1906), Marcelo Martins Moreno (1987), Constantino Noya (null), Jaime Moreno (1974), Ko Ishikawa (1970), and Juan Manuel Peña (1973). After him are Miguel Rimba (1967), Juan Carlos Arce (1985), Joaquín Botero (1977), Óscar Sánchez (1971), Ronald Raldes (1981), and Carlos Lampe (1987).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Bolivia

Among soccer players born in Bolivia, Marco Sandy ranks 28Before him are Juan Argote (1906), Marcelo Martins Moreno (1987), Constantino Noya (null), Jaime Moreno (1974), Ko Ishikawa (1970), and Juan Manuel Peña (1973). After him are Miguel Rimba (1967), Juan Carlos Arce (1985), Joaquín Botero (1977), Óscar Sánchez (1971), Ronald Raldes (1981), and Carlos Lampe (1987).