SOCCER PLAYER

Nicolò Fagioli

2001 - Today

Photo of Nicolò Fagioli

Icon of person Nicolò Fagioli

Nicolò Fagioli (born 12 February 2001) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Serie A club Fiorentina and the Italy national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 27 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 20 in 2024). Nicolò Fagioli is the 10,693rd most popular soccer player (down from 9,855th in 2024), the 4,753rd most popular biography from Italy (down from 4,647th in 2019) and the 471st most popular Italian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Nicolò Fagioli by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Nicolò Fagioli ranks 10,693 out of 21,273Before him are João Pedro, Fernando Varela, Odsonne Édouard, Yoshinori Sembiki, Shane Smeltz, and Wilson Pérez. After him are Masaya Honda, Conny Pohlers, Javier Margas, Hideaki Kitajima, Takamitsu Ota, and Léo Dubois.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 2001, Nicolò Fagioli ranks 78Before him are Luiz Henrique, Rayan Aït-Nouri, Odilon Kossounou, Lauren James, Olga Danilović, and Soya Yumoto. After him are I.N, Bryan Zaragoza, Julien Alfred, Ty Simpkins, Lassina Traoré, and Igor Jesus.

Others Born in 2001

Go to all Rankings

In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Nicolò Fagioli ranks 4,750 out of 5,161Before him are Leonardo Bertagnolli (1978), and Pier Gonella (1977). After him are Cristina Scuccia (1988), Ivan Provedel (1994), Elisa Uga (1968), Nicodemo Gentile (1969), Silvia Farina Elia (1972), Imelda Chiappa (1966), Cristian Molinaro (1983), Paolo Vidoz (1970), Aldo Junior Simoncini (1986), and Andrea Noè (1969).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Italy

Among soccer players born in Italy, Nicolò Fagioli ranks 471Before him are Manolo Gabbiadini (1991), Cristiano Biraghi (1992), Andrea Poli (1989), Simone Padoin (1984), Robert Acquafresca (1987), and Luca Antonelli (1987). After him are Ivan Provedel (1994), Cristian Molinaro (1983), Aldo Junior Simoncini (1986), Manuele Blasi (1980), Luigi Sartor (1975), and Roberto Baronio (1977).