SOCCER PLAYER

Masataka Sakamoto

1978 - Today

Photo of Masataka Sakamoto

Icon of person Masataka Sakamoto

Masataka Sakamoto (坂本 將貴, Sakamoto Masataka; born February 24, 1978) is a former Japanese football player.He currently works as an individual coach for the Japan national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 27 different languages on Wikipedia. Masataka Sakamoto is the 15,360th most popular soccer player (up from 16,019th in 2024), the 4,111th most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,530th in 2019) and the 1,960th most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Masataka Sakamoto by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Masataka Sakamoto ranks 15,360 out of 21,273Before him are Robert Ivanov, Óscar Bagüí, David McCreery, Enrique Sola, Almuth Schult, and Kota Hattori. After him are Brayan Perea, Nicolai Stokholm, Edinaldo Batista dos Santos, Svetoslav Todorov, Adrián Ortolá, and Dejan Stefanović.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1978, Masataka Sakamoto ranks 1,225Before him are Daniel Franzese, Alexander Wolf, Beat Hefti, Aneta Konieczna, Bartosz Soćko, and Virginia Williams. After him are Svetoslav Todorov, Francisco Pérez Sanchez, Galib Jafarov, Takashi Miki, György Kozmann, and Abdelaziz Ahanfouf.

Others Born in 1978

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Masataka Sakamoto ranks 4,124 out of 6,245Before him are Shuto Machino (1999), Ayako Moriya (1990), Aimi (1991), Tomohiko Ikeuchi (1977), Toru Araiba (1979), and Kota Hattori (1977). After him are Genta Miura (1995), Takuya Mikami (1980), Takahito Soma (1981), Toshirō Tomochika (1975), Ryoji Kawamoto (1982), and Noriko Senge (1988).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Masataka Sakamoto ranks 1,973Before him are Hidetoshi Wakui (1983), Yutaka Takahashi (1980), Shuto Machino (1999), Tomohiko Ikeuchi (1977), Toru Araiba (1979), and Kota Hattori (1977). After him are Genta Miura (1995), Takuya Mikami (1980), Takahito Soma (1981), Toshirō Tomochika (1975), Ryoji Kawamoto (1982), and Yuma Suzuki (1996).