SOCCER PLAYER

Nathan Aké

1995 - Today

Photo of Nathan Aké

Icon of person Nathan Aké

Nathan Benjamin Aké (Dutch: ['nɑtɑn 'aːkeː]; born 18 February 1995) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a centre-back or left-back for Premier League club Manchester City and the Netherlands national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Nathan Aké is the 5,481st most popular soccer player (down from 4,188th in 2019), the 968th most popular biography from Netherlands (down from 890th in 2019) and the 150th most popular Dutch Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Nathan Aké by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Nathan Aké ranks 5,481 out of 21,273Before him are Baba Rahman, Moise Kean, Krunoslav Jurčić, Zetti, Roberto Acuña, and David Jarolím. After him are Manfred Schaefer, Tom Taylor, Atsushi Terui, Julio Cardeñosa, Odd Frantzen, and Tatsuya Kawahara.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1995, Nathan Aké ranks 61Before him are Nayeon, Justice Smith, Simone Ashley, Jordan Bardella, Munir El Haddadi, and Sardar Azmoun. After him are Naby Keïta, Manuel Akanji, Keita Baldé, Mario Pašalić, Mads Pedersen, and Kehlani.

Others Born in 1995

Go to all Rankings

In Netherlands

Among people born in Netherlands, Nathan Aké ranks 968 out of 1,646Before him are Fedde Le Grand (1977), Harry Lubse (1951), Ferry Corsten (1973), Annemiek van Vleuten (1982), Hardwell (1988), and Joseph Smit (1836). After him are Irma Heijting-Schuhmacher (1925), Meindert DeJong (1906), Peter Winnen (1957), Dries van der Lof (1919), Robert Doornbos (1981), and Quincy Promes (1992).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Netherlands

Among soccer players born in Netherlands, Nathan Aké ranks 150Before him are Sander Boschker (1970), Kevin Strootman (1990), Andy van der Meyde (1979), John van den Brom (1966), Ricardo Moniz (1964), and Harry Lubse (1951). After him are Quincy Promes (1992), Mbark Boussoufa (1984), Jaap Mol (1912), Wilfred Bouma (1978), Denny Landzaat (1976), and Justin Kluivert (1999).