SOCCER PLAYER

Mihailo Petrović

1957 - Today

Photo of Mihailo Petrović

Icon of person Mihailo Petrović

Mihailo "Mischa" Petrović (Serbian Cyrillic: Михаило "Миша" Петровић, pronounced [pětroʋitɕ]; born 18 October 1957) is a Serbian football coach and former player who was most recently the head coach of Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo. He also holds an Austrian passport. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 41 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 40 in 2024). Mihailo Petrović is the 3,819th most popular soccer player (down from 2,930th in 2024), the 293rd most popular biography from Serbia (down from 261st in 2019) and the 62nd most popular Serbian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mihailo Petrović by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Mihailo Petrović ranks 3,819 out of 21,273Before him are Tamaki Uchiyama, Tomonori Tsunematsu, Ali Parvin, Wataru Ota, Luis Otero, and John van Loen. After him are Dušan Galis, Rune Bratseth, Luis Maidana, Francisco Zuluaga, Rodolfo Rodríguez, and Brandãozinho.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1957, Mihailo Petrović ranks 348Before him are Sainkho Namtchylak, Pietro Paolo Virdis, Andrew Cuomo, Yelena Kondakova, Arkadi Ghukasyan, and Arto Tunçboyacıyan. After him are Lluís Homar, Pierre Moscovici, Dimple Kapadia, Kozo Tashima, Johannes Hahn, and Renée Soutendijk.

Others Born in 1957

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Mihailo Petrović ranks 293 out of 661Before him are Luka Lipošinović (1933), Svetlana Velmar-Janković (1933), Goran Karan (1964), László Szabados (1911), Dragan Šakota (1952), and Ivan Jovanović (1962). After him are Milorad Arsenijević (1906), Zoran Živković (1960), Miloš Vučević (1974), Slaviša Žungul (1954), Milinko Pantić (1966), and Aleksandar Ivoš (1931).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Serbia

Among soccer players born in Serbia, Mihailo Petrović ranks 62Before him are Vojislav Melić (1940), Slaviša Jokanović (1968), Nemanja Matić (1988), Luka Jović (1997), Aleksandar Atanacković (1920), and Luka Lipošinović (1933). After him are Milorad Arsenijević (1906), Slaviša Žungul (1954), Milinko Pantić (1966), Aleksandar Ivoš (1931), Aleksandar Živković (1977), and Blagoje Paunović (1947).