SOCCER PLAYER

Michael Liendl

1985 - Today

Photo of Michael Liendl

Icon of person Michael Liendl

Michael Liendl (born 25 October 1985) is a retired Austrian professional association football player who was the central midfielder for WAC. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Michael Liendl is the 20,154th most popular soccer player, the 1,449th most popular biography from Austria and the 213th most popular Austrian Soccer Player.

Michael Liendl is most famous for being an Austrian footballer known for his skills as a midfielder. He has played for various clubs in Austria and Germany, notably achieving success with teams like Austria Wien and Sturm Graz.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Michael Liendl by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Michael Liendl ranks 20,154 out of 21,273Before him are Soungoutou Magassa, Ryusuke Sakai, Yuji Kimura, Kelvin Amian, Kyohei Uchida, and Ron-Thorben Hoffmann. After him are Naoki Hatada, Boubacar Traoré, Saidy Janko, Fran Vélez, Mykyta Burda, and Kenji Koyano.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1985, Michael Liendl ranks 1,755Before him are Scott Brash, Charlie Simpson, Tomoki Ikemoto, Matheus Ferraz, Felicity Galvez, and Dávid Tóth. After him are Lucie Pinson, Takeshi Handa, Teresa Frassinetti, Somdev Devvarman, Whitney Port, and Sylvia Fowles.

Others Born in 1985

Go to all Rankings

In Austria

Among people born in Austria, Michael Liendl ranks 1,449 out of 1,424Before him are Alexander Prass (2001), Eva-Maria Brem (1988), Fritz Dopfer (1987), Marco Grüll (1998), Niklas Hedl (2001), and Adrian Grbić (1996). After him are Bernadette Schild (1990), Leopold Querfeld (2003), Sarah Puntigam (1992), Daniel Bachmann (1994), Daniel Royer (1990), and Hannes Wolf (1999).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Austria

Among soccer players born in Austria, Michael Liendl ranks 213Before him are Robert Žulj (1992), Patrick Farkas (1992), Alexander Prass (2001), Marco Grüll (1998), Niklas Hedl (2001), and Adrian Grbić (1996). After him are Leopold Querfeld (2003), Sarah Puntigam (1992), Daniel Bachmann (1994), Daniel Royer (1990), Hannes Wolf (1999), and Marco Djuricin (1992).