SOCCER PLAYER

Neško Milovanović

1974 - Today

Photo of Neško Milovanović

Icon of person Neško Milovanović

Neško Milovanović (Serbian Cyrillic: Нешко Миловановић; born 4 December 1974) is a Serbian football manager and former player. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Neško Milovanović is the 13,144th most popular soccer player (up from 15,205th in 2019), the 543rd most popular biography from Serbia (up from 605th in 2019) and the 187th most popular Serbian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Neško Milovanović by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Neško Milovanović ranks 13,144 out of 21,273Before him are Derek Johnstone, Kévin Malcuit, Akira Ito, Shohei Ikeda, Ahmed Jamil, and Adolfo Machado. After him are Takuya Shiihara, Ian Harte, Emerson de Andrade Santos, Koji Kataoka, Cucho Hernández, and Iván Alonso.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Neško Milovanović ranks 956Before him are Benjamin Limo, Khatuna Lorig, Jukka Hentunen, Orlando Jordan, Tomonori Tateishi, and Miya Tachibana. After him are Tomas Thordarson, Junji Nishizawa, Arkadiusz Bąk, Attila Czene, Keiji Ishizuka, and Ronan Le Crom.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Neško Milovanović ranks 543 out of 661Before him are Nikola Drinčić (1984), Stevan Jelovac (1989), Miloš Bajalica (1981), Nemanja Pejčinović (1987), Aleksandar Ignjovski (1991), and Novica Veličković (1986). After him are Mina Popović (1994), Ana Bjelica (1992), Uroš Matić (1990), Miloš Babić (1968), Marko Vujin (1984), and Darko Brašanac (1992).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Serbia

Among soccer players born in Serbia, Neško Milovanović ranks 187Before him are Milan Gajić (1986), Vladimir Dišljenković (1981), Nikola Drinčić (1984), Miloš Bajalica (1981), Nemanja Pejčinović (1987), and Aleksandar Ignjovski (1991). After him are Uroš Matić (1990), Darko Brašanac (1992), Marko Lomić (1983), Saša Lukić (1996), Zlatan Alomerović (1991), and Jagoš Vuković (1988).