SOCCER PLAYER

Mladen Mladenović

1964 - Today

Photo of Mladen Mladenović

Icon of person Mladen Mladenović

Mladen Mladenović (born 13 September 1964) is a Croatian professional football manager and retired player who played as a midfielder. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mladen Mladenović is the 1,715th most popular soccer player (up from 1,968th in 2019), the 207th most popular biography from Croatia (up from 229th in 2019) and the 31st most popular Croatian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mladen Mladenović by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Mladen Mladenović ranks 1,715 out of 21,273Before him are Mark Jones, Ahn Jung-hwan, Tetsuya Nishiwaki, Antonio Valentín Angelillo, Renato Cesarini, and Yozhef Sabo. After him are Milorad Pavić, Oliver Neuville, Masae Suzuki, Diogo Jota, Imre Kovács, and Leroy Sané.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1964, Mladen Mladenović ranks 157Before him are Jeff Hanneman, Vladimír Weiss, Valentina Vargas, Marius Lăcătuș, Andrew Niccol, and Kerry King. After him are The Boogeyman, Nicola Larini, Daphne Caruana Galizia, Mark Addy, Tim Blake Nelson, and Barry Bonds.

Others Born in 1964

Go to all Rankings

In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Mladen Mladenović ranks 207 out of 700Before him are Luka Peruzović (1952), Ante Čačić (1953), Milan Neralić (1875), Marko Perković (1966), Dragutin Gorjanović-Kramberger (1856), and Petar Skansi (1943). After him are Rajko Grlić (1947), Franjo Mihalić (1920), Ivo Lapenna (1909), Antun Mihanović (1796), Ivan Buljan (1949), and Ernesto Vidal (1921).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Croatia

Among soccer players born in Croatia, Mladen Mladenović ranks 31Before him are Ivica Olić (1979), Darijo Srna (1982), Ivica Šurjak (1953), Aljoša Asanović (1965), Mario Varglien (1905), and Luka Peruzović (1952). After him are Ivan Buljan (1949), Ernesto Vidal (1921), Mario Boljat (1951), Jurica Jerković (1950), Zlatko Papec (1934), and Zvonimir Soldo (1967).