SOCCER PLAYER

Mario Galindo

1951 - Today

Photo of Mario Galindo

Icon of person Mario Galindo

Mario Enrique Galindo Calisto [1] (born 10 August 1951 in Punta Arenas) is a Chilean former footballer who played as a right-back. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mario Galindo is the 6,851st most popular soccer player (up from 6,918th in 2019), the 207th most popular biography from Chile (up from 214th in 2019) and the 90th most popular Chilean Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mario Galindo by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Mario Galindo ranks 6,851 out of 21,273Before him are Pedro Contreras, Asier del Horno, Karim Abdul Razak, Kazuya Okazaki, Fahrudin Omerović, and Andrzej Pałasz. After him are Roman Yaremchuk, Igor Kolyvanov, Fábio Rochemback, Paulo Rink, Ignacio Flores, and Joey Barton.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1951, Mario Galindo ranks 668Before him are Robert Wuhl, Fred Schneider, Nikolay Merkushkin, Antonio de la Torre, Jacques Zimako, and Lawrence O'Donnell. After him are Kevin Whately, Jim Justice, John Glascock, Corinne Lepage, Kaci Kullmann Five, and Kazuko Sawamatsu.

Others Born in 1951

Go to all Rankings

In Chile

Among people born in Chile, Mario Galindo ranks 207 out of 321Before him are Aldo Valentini (1938), Sergio Navarro (1936), Leonardo Véliz (1945), Cristián de la Fuente (1974), Miguel Ángel Neira (1952), and Rebeca Matte Bello (1875). After him are Pablo Pozo (1973), Roberto Hodge (1944), Juan Carlos Letelier (1959), Manuel Rojas (1954), Evelyn Ankers (1918), and Gustavo Moscoso (1955).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Chile

Among soccer players born in Chile, Mario Galindo ranks 90Before him are Juan Rodríguez Vega (1944), Osvaldo Castro (1947), Aldo Valentini (1938), Sergio Navarro (1936), Leonardo Véliz (1945), and Miguel Ángel Neira (1952). After him are Roberto Hodge (1944), Juan Carlos Letelier (1959), Manuel Rojas (1954), Gustavo Moscoso (1955), Manuel Astorga (1937), and Marco Cornez (1957).