SOCCER PLAYER

Marian Hristov

1973 - Today

Photo of Marian Hristov

Icon of person Marian Hristov

Marian Georgiev Hristov (Bulgarian: Мариян Георгиев Христов) (born 29 July 1973) is a Bulgarian former professional footballer who played as a midfielder. Since his retirement from playing, he has worked as an assistant manager. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Marian Hristov is the 10,237th most popular soccer player (down from 9,144th in 2019), the 349th most popular biography from Bulgaria (down from 342nd in 2019) and the 63rd most popular Bulgarian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Marian Hristov by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Marian Hristov ranks 10,237 out of 21,273Before him are Velko Yotov, Hiroshi Miyazawa, Chris Woods, Khalid Boutaïb, Mitchell Duke, and Luiz Henrique. After him are Igor Semshov, Fabão, Abuda, Boy Waterman, John Veldman, and Mate Bilić.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1973, Marian Hristov ranks 760Before him are Jordan Prentice, Mkhitar Manukyan, Li Xiaoshuang, Alban Bushi, Baciro Djá, and Tom Saintfiet. After him are Hatem Ghoula, Eric Lange, Petr Gabriel, Carole Montillet, Stefan Kretzschmar, and Shirley Clamp.

Others Born in 1973

Go to all Rankings

In Bulgaria

Among people born in Bulgaria, Marian Hristov ranks 349 out of 415Before him are Nadezhda Neynsky (1962), Stanislav Manolev (1985), Preslava (1984), Stanka Zlateva (1983), Konstantina Kouneva (1964), and Nikolay Bukhalov (1967). After him are Sunay Erdem (1971), Elena Pampoulova (1972), Radostin Kishishev (1974), Tereza Marinova (1977), Sevdalin Marinov (1968), and Gosho Ginchev (1969).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Bulgaria

Among soccer players born in Bulgaria, Marian Hristov ranks 63Before him are Ivaylo Andonov (1967), Ayan Sadakov (1961), Georgi Dimitrov (1959), Dimitar Rangelov (1983), Petar Hubchev (1964), and Stanislav Manolev (1985). After him are Radostin Kishishev (1974), Gosho Ginchev (1969), Zdravko Lazarov (1976), Adalbert Zafirov (1969), Vladimir Manchev (1977), and Georgi Peev (1979).