SOCCER PLAYER

Milan Luhový

1963 - Today

Photo of Milan Luhový

Icon of person Milan Luhový

Milan Luhový (born 1 January 1963) is a Slovak former professional footballer who played as a forward. At international level, he made 31 appearances for Czechoslovakia, scoring seven goals. Luhový is considered the sharpest football critic by the Czech Republic by the Czech and Slovak media. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Milan Luhový is the 4,875th most popular soccer player (up from 5,280th in 2019), the 228th most popular biography from Slovakia (up from 243rd in 2019) and the 48th most popular Slovak Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Milan Luhový ranks 4,875 out of 21,273Before him are Kenta Hasegawa, Abdoulaye Faye, Anthony Modeste, Virgilio Levratto, Aleksandr Ponomarev, and Kakoko Etepé. After him are Jean Tamini, Cristhian Stuani, Theo Walcott, Levan Kobiashvili, Rubén Glaria, and Mohamed Aboutrika.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1963, Milan Luhový ranks 405Before him are Jaaved Jaaferi, Christopher Heyerdahl, Vanessa Estelle Williams, Sylvain Chomet, Armin Schwarz, and Viktar Babaryka. After him are Lori Petty, Rand Paul, Candan Erçetin, Stefan Pettersson, Marcos Pontes, and Li Shufu.

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In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Milan Luhový ranks 228 out of 418Before him are Róbert Vittek (1982), Mirka Federer (1978), Vincent Lukáč (1954), Max Weiss (1857), Ľudovít Ódor (1976), and Vladimír Weiss (1989). After him are Mikuláš Galanda (1895), Ján Figeľ (1960), Pavol Biroš (1953), Stanislav Griga (1961), Dominika Cibulková (1989), and Herman Steiner (1905).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Slovakia

Among soccer players born in Slovakia, Milan Luhový ranks 48Before him are Stanislav Seman (1952), Jozef Chovanec (1960), Dušan Galis (1949), Ján Čapkovič (1948), Róbert Vittek (1982), and Vladimír Weiss (1989). After him are Pavol Biroš (1953), Stanislav Griga (1961), Juraj Kucka (1987), Miroslav Stoch (1989), Peter Dubovský (1972), and Ján Mucha (1982).