SOCCER PLAYER

Mario Medina

1952 - Today

Photo of Mario Medina

Icon of person Mario Medina

Mario Medina Rojas (born 2 September 1952) is a Mexican former football forward who played for Mexico in the 1978 FIFA World Cup. He also played for Deportivo Toluca. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mario Medina is the 7,582nd most popular soccer player (down from 6,907th in 2019), the 488th most popular biography from Mexico (down from 477th in 2019) and the 103rd most popular Mexican Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mario Medina by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Mario Medina ranks 7,582 out of 21,273Before him are Yasuyuki Iwasaki, Jurica Vranješ, Hitoshi Sogahata, Amir Rrahmani, Tomomitsu Kobayashi, and Remo Freuler. After him are Choi Young-il, Álvaro González, Goran Vasilijević, Carlos Muñoz, Ronald Waterreus, and Víctor Sánchez.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1952, Mario Medina ranks 725Before him are Roberto Bailey, Hilkka Riihivuori, Marsha Blackburn, Walter Murphy, John Parr, and Marco Aurélio. After him are Chuck Leavell, Milena Duchková, Ernesto Díaz, Romeo Corbo, John Tooby, and Bill Pope.

Others Born in 1952

Go to all Rankings

In Mexico

Among people born in Mexico, Mario Medina ranks 488 out of 729Before him are Guillermo Mendizábal (1954), Benjamín Galindo (1960), Oribe Peralta (1984), Hugo López-Gatell Ramírez (1969), Jorge Blanco (1991), and Alejandra Barros (1970). After him are Carlos Muñoz (1959), Pável Pardo (1976), Ricardo Peláez (1963), Esteban Gutiérrez (1991), Gabriel Soto (1975), and Miguel de Icaza (1972).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Mexico

Among soccer players born in Mexico, Mario Medina ranks 103Before him are Alfredo Tena (1956), Félix Cruz (1961), Gerardo Torrado (1979), Guillermo Mendizábal (1954), Benjamín Galindo (1960), and Oribe Peralta (1984). After him are Carlos Muñoz (1959), Pável Pardo (1976), Ricardo Peláez (1963), Víctor Rangel (1957), Omar Bravo (1980), and Luis García Postigo (1969).