SOCCER PLAYER

Martin Brunner

1963 - Today

Photo of Martin Brunner

Icon of person Martin Brunner

Martin Brunner (born 23 April 1963 in Zürich) is a retired Swiss football goalkeeper, who was capped 36 times for the Swiss national team. He was an unused substitute at the 1994 FIFA World Cup. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Martin Brunner is the 7,656th most popular soccer player (down from 6,358th in 2019), the 743rd most popular biography from Switzerland (down from 704th in 2019) and the 93rd most popular Swiss Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Martin Brunner by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Martin Brunner ranks 7,656 out of 21,273Before her are René Müller, David Jones, Dariusz Dziekanowski, Lucas Severino, Jesús Fernández Collado, and Peter Møller. After her are Kazuya Igarashi, Shinji Morita, Jovan Stanković, Henk Timmer, Emanuele Giaccherini, and Robert de Pinho de Souza.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1963, Martin Brunner ranks 682Before her are Marco Marin, Stephan Lehmann, Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Ricardo Peláez, Dragoljub Brnović, and Olga Chernyavskaya. After her are Luca Fusi, Pauline Lafont, Guildo Horn, Damian Chapa, Kirk Baptiste, and Natalie Merchant.

Others Born in 1963

Go to all Rankings

In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Martin Brunner ranks 743 out of 1,015Before her are Stéphane Grichting (1979), Berat Djimsiti (1993), Remo Freuler (1992), Ricardo Cabanas (1979), Max Julen (1961), and Stephan Lehmann (1963). After her are Selina Gasparin (1984), Timea Bacsinszky (1989), Mario Gavranović (1989), Bettina Bunge (1963), Maurice Kottelat (1957), and Ursula Konzett (1959).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Switzerland

Among soccer players born in Switzerland, Martin Brunner ranks 93Before her are Steve von Bergen (1983), Stéphane Grichting (1979), Berat Djimsiti (1993), Remo Freuler (1992), Ricardo Cabanas (1979), and Stephan Lehmann (1963). After her are Mario Gavranović (1989), Martin Rueda (1963), Benjamin Huggel (1977), Christoph Spycher (1978), Marwin Hitz (1987), and Philipp Degen (1983).