BASKETBALL PLAYER

Mihovil Nakić

1955 - Today

Photo of Mihovil Nakić

Icon of person Mihovil Nakić

Mihovil Nakić-Vojnović (born 31 July 1955) is a Croatian former professional basketball player. Standing at 2.04 m (6 ft 8+1⁄2 in), he played as a small forward. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mihovil Nakić is the 194th most popular basketball player (up from 206th in 2019), the 341st most popular biography from Croatia (up from 358th in 2019) and the 12th most popular Croatian Basketball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mihovil Nakić by language

Loading...

Among BASKETBALL PLAYERS

Among basketball players, Mihovil Nakić ranks 194 out of 1,757Before him are Pablo Laso, Zurab Sakandelidze, Šarūnas Marčiulionis, Spencer Haywood, Vince Boryla, and Walt Bellamy. After him are Tomás Herrera Martínez, James Worthy, Stojko Vranković, Stepas Butautas, Rasho Nesterović, and Sergio Scariolo.

Most Popular Basketball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1955, Mihovil Nakić ranks 408Before him are Marcelo Trobbiani, Yōjirō Takita, Enver İzmaylov, Janusz Kupcewicz, Uwe Reinders, and Rob Portman. After him are Jean Lassalle, Toshio Hosokawa, Reinhold Mitterlehner, Egidio Miragoli, King Kong Bundy, and Philip Dimitrov.

Others Born in 1955

Go to all Rankings

In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Mihovil Nakić ranks 341 out of 700Before him are Zoran Primorac (1969), Bruno Belin (1929), Tomislav Erceg (1971), Ivan Jazbinšek (1914), Ivan Jurić (1975), and Zoran Mamić (1971). After him are Antony (null), Branko Kralj (1924), Jakov Fak (1987), Stojko Vranković (1964), Dominik Livaković (1995), and Petar Šegvić (1930).

Among BASKETBALL PLAYERS In Croatia

Among basketball players born in Croatia, Mihovil Nakić ranks 12Before him are Vinko Jelovac (1948), Dino Rađa (1967), Velimir Perasović (1965), Željko Jerkov (1953), Andro Knego (1956), and Damir Šolman (1948). After him are Stojko Vranković (1964), Žan Tabak (1970), Arijan Komazec (1970), Peja Stojaković (1977), Danko Cvjetićanin (1963), and Marko Popović (1982).