SOCCER PLAYER

Mladen Rudonja

1971 - Today

Photo of Mladen Rudonja

Icon of person Mladen Rudonja

Mladen Rudonja () (born 26 July 1971) is a Slovenian retired footballer. He most often played as a winger (usually on the left side) or striker. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 20 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 18 in 2024). Mladen Rudonja is the 9,100th most popular soccer player (up from 9,269th in 2024), the 196th most popular biography from Slovenia (up from 210th in 2019) and the 37th most popular Slovene Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mladen Rudonja by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Mladen Rudonja ranks 9,100 out of 21,273Before him are Yoshinobu Minowa, Tobias Hysén, Michalis Konstantinou, Takafumi Hori, Mattias Asper, and Filip Đuričić. After him are Quincy Owusu-Abeyie, Pablo Fornals, Verónica Boquete, Abel Aguilar, Mark Lawrenson, and Yksel Osmanovski.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1971, Mladen Rudonja ranks 703Before him are Chandra Sturrup, Petr Nedvěd, Lilian Laslandes, Alexander Novak, Amanda Detmer, and Hiep Thi Le. After him are Vadym Gutzeit, Gülse Birsel, Brent Renaud, Federico Giunti, Andrea Sartoretti, and Mohammed Al-Khilaiwi.

Others Born in 1971

Go to all Rankings

In Slovenia

Among people born in Slovenia, Mladen Rudonja ranks 197 out of 340Before him are Iztok Čop (1972), Alenka Gotar (1977), Darko Milanič (1967), Uroš Zorman (1980), Anamarija Lampič (1995), Sani Bečirovič (1981), and Alenka Zupančič (1966). After him are Urška Žolnir (1981), Nuša Derenda (1969), Dalibor Stevanović (1984), Benjamin Šeško (2003), and Andrej Hauptman (1975).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Slovenia

Among soccer players born in Slovenia, Mladen Rudonja ranks 37Before him are Mišo Brečko (1984), Marko Šuler (1983), Benjamin Verbič (1993), Miran Pavlin (1971), Ermin Šiljak (1973), and Darko Milanič (1967). After him are Dalibor Stevanović (1984), Benjamin Šeško (2003), Aleksander Šeliga (1980), Andraž Kirm (1984), Zlatan Ljubijankić (1983), and Saša Gajser (1974).