SOCCER PLAYER

Martin Jiránek

1979 - Today

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Martin Jiránek (Czech pronunciation: [ˈmarcɪn ˈjɪraːnɛk]; born 25 May 1979 in Prague) is a former Czech international footballer. A defender, Jiránek played in the top division of several countries. Jiránek played in a number of international tournaments for his country. In 2002, he was part of the Czech under 21 side which won the 2002 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship in Switzerland. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Martin Jiránek is the 6,794th most popular soccer player (down from 6,497th in 2019), the 849th most popular biography from Czechia (down from 841st in 2019) and the 123rd most popular Czech Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Martin Jiránek ranks 6,794 out of 21,273Before him are Bas Dost, Gonzalo Castro, Achille Emaná, Luke Shaw, Thomas Sørensen, and Sergei Kiriakov. After him are Morgan Schneiderlin, Motohiro Yamaguchi, Sergei Borovsky, Roberto Tricella, Pedro Porro, and Rubén Castro.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Martin Jiránek ranks 321Before him are Vincent Kartheiser, Adrian Zandberg, Iryna Vereshchuk, Fabián Carini, Ryohei Nishiwaki, and Yvonne Catterfeld. After him are Dania Ramirez, Hong Chau, Renato, Adam Rose, Hindi Zahra, and Chantal Janzen.

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In Czechia

Among people born in Czechia, Martin Jiránek ranks 849 out of 1,200Before him are Jan Suchopárek (1969), Tomáš Enge (1976), Lenka Kotková (1973), Ewa Farna (1993), Cyril Suk (1967), and Vladimír Růžička (1963). After him are Tomáš Dvořák (1972), Květa Peschke (1975), Zdeněk Pecka (1954), Theodor Gebre Selassie (1986), Tomáš Sivok (1983), and Radoslav Kováč (1979).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Czechia

Among soccer players born in Czechia, Martin Jiránek ranks 123Before him are Pavel Řehák (1963), Jan Berger (1955), František Straka (1958), Jan Fiala (1956), František Mysliveček (1965), and Jan Suchopárek (1969). After him are Theodor Gebre Selassie (1986), Tomáš Sivok (1983), Radoslav Kováč (1979), Václav Svěrkoš (1983), Rudi Skácel (1979), and Tomáš Necid (1989).