SOCCER PLAYER

Marcus Hahnemann

1972 - Today

Photo of Marcus Hahnemann

Icon of person Marcus Hahnemann

Marcus Stephen Hahnemann (born June 15, 1972) is an American former professional soccer player who played as a goalkeeper. Graduating out of Seattle Pacific University, he played for the Seattle Sounders between 1994 and 1996. Between 1997 and 1999 he turned out for the Colorado Rapids, signing with English club Fulham in 1999. Unable to become the first-choice goalkeeper at Fulham, he enjoyed loan spells with Rochdale and Reading, before signing permanently with Reading in 2002. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 29 different languages on Wikipedia. Marcus Hahnemann is the 12,753rd most popular soccer player (down from 10,888th in 2024), the 17,722nd most popular biography from United States (down from 16,610th in 2019) and the 96th most popular American Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Marcus Hahnemann by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Marcus Hahnemann ranks 12,753 out of 21,273Before him are Paul Scharner, Ryota Morioka, Takeshi Urakami, Renato Cajá, Aboubakar Kamara, and Vagif Javadov. After him are Ahmed Reda Tagnaouti, Vanderson, Stephen O'Donnell, Álvaro Luiz Maior de Aquino, Francisco Calvo, and Takeshi Ono.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1972, Marcus Hahnemann ranks 1,141Before him are Gideon Emery, Olivier Echouafni, Ibrahim Baylan, Veiko Õunpuu, Takaya Oishi, and Åsa Romson. After him are Zafar Guliev, Selenis Leyva, Patrick Favre, Chun Wei Cheung, Timothy Mack, and Matthew Wood.

Others Born in 1972

Go to all Rankings

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In United States

Among soccer players born in United States, Marcus Hahnemann ranks 96Before him are Desmond Armstrong (1964), Shaq Moore (1996), Sam Mewis (1992), Nick Rimando (1979), Julie Foudy (1971), and Chris Henderson (1970). After him are John O'Brien (1977), John Harkes (1967), Julián Araujo (2001), Mike Burns (1970), Frankie Hejduk (1974), and Johnny Cardoso (2001).