SOCCER PLAYER

Masato Morishige

1987 - Today

Photo of Masato Morishige

Icon of person Masato Morishige

Masato Morishige (森重 真人, Morishige Masato; born 21 May 1987) is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a centre-back, captain and currently play for J1 League club, FC Tokyo. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Masato Morishige is the 10,332nd most popular soccer player (down from 9,876th in 2019), the 2,980th most popular biography from Japan (down from 2,387th in 2019) and the 1,292nd most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Masato Morishige by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Masato Morishige ranks 10,332 out of 21,273Before him are Alex Král, Brad Smith, Cata Díaz, Antti Niemi, Hugo Leal, and Oswaldo Ibarra. After him are Giovanni Reyna, Johan Mojica, Michael Petkovic, Bakaye Traoré, Chinedu Obasi, and Ruben Pereira.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1987, Masato Morishige ranks 531Before him are Carlos Eduardo, Yoon Park, Hafsia Herzi, Wang Zheng, Marcel Nguyen, and Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen. After him are Didrik Solli-Tangen, Mame Biram Diouf, Lily Cole, Robert Acquafresca, Alina Plugaru, and Ezgi Asaroğlu.

Others Born in 1987

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Masato Morishige ranks 2,980 out of 6,245Before him are Takahiro Moriuchi (1988), Kanna Hashimoto (1999), Ryōta Murata (1986), Teruyuki Moniwa (1981), Masafumi Yoshida (1985), and Ryoko Takara (1990). After him are Yuriko Yoshitaka (1988), Satoshi Yamaguchi (1978), Miyu Irino (1988), Yusuke Adachi (1961), Juri Ueno (1986), and Daisuke Ichikawa (1980).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Masato Morishige ranks 1,292Before him are Jun Takata (1977), Kentaro Sakai (1975), Toshihiro Aoyama (1986), Teruyuki Moniwa (1981), Masafumi Yoshida (1985), and Ryoko Takara (1990). After him are Satoshi Yamaguchi (1978), Yusuke Adachi (1961), Daisuke Ichikawa (1980), Dai Takeuchi (1992), Mitsuteru Kudo (1991), and Genki Miyachi (1994).