SOCCER PLAYER

Michal Bílek

1965 - Today

Photo of Michal Bílek

Icon of person Michal Bílek

Michal Bílek (born 13 April 1965) is a football manager and former player who serves as head coach of the Czech Republic U21 national team. He led the Czech Republic national football team for four years between 2009 and 2013. As a player, he represented Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic at international level. His playing position was right midfielder. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Michal Bílek is the 4,656th most popular soccer player (down from 3,468th in 2019), the 741st most popular biography from Czechia (down from 670th in 2019) and the 83rd most popular Czech Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Michal Bílek by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Michal Bílek ranks 4,656 out of 21,273Before him are Santiago Urquiaga, Vladimir Astapovsky, Zygfryd Szołtysik, Almir, Daniel Sanabria, and Dominique Bathenay. After him are Adam Musiał, Manuel Fernandes, Dimitar Largov, Boris Razinsky, Josef Streb, and Serge Chiesa.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1965, Michal Bílek ranks 346Before him are Roman Coppola, Alexandra Vandernoot, Marc Degryse, Anatole Collinet Makosso, Carlos Saldanha, and Miguel Pardeza. After him are Jeff Scott Soto, Leslie Hope, Dmytro Firtash, Alva Noto, Wallace Langham, and Futaba Kioka.

Others Born in 1965

Go to all Rankings

In Czechia

Among people born in Czechia, Michal Bílek ranks 741 out of 1,200Before him are Marek Heinz (1977), Luděk Macela (1950), Josef Černý (1939), Miloslava Misáková (1922), Břetislav Dolejší (1928), and August von Gödrich (1859). After him are Daniela Peštová (1970), Pavel Kuka (1968), Jaroslav Tuček (1882), Karel Senecký (1919), Jiří Němec (1966), and Walter Susskind (1913).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Czechia

Among soccer players born in Czechia, Michal Bílek ranks 83Before him are Jiří Hledík (1929), František Štambachr (1953), Jiří Feureisl (1931), Marek Heinz (1977), Luděk Macela (1950), and Břetislav Dolejší (1928). After him are Pavel Kuka (1968), Karel Senecký (1919), Jiří Němec (1966), Jaromír Blažek (1972), Verner Lička (1954), and Vlastimil Petržela (1953).