SOCCER PLAYER

Noriaki Asakura

1973 - Today

Photo of Noriaki Asakura

Icon of person Noriaki Asakura

Noriaki Asakura is a soccer player born in 1973 in , which is now part of modern day Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. Noriaki Asakura is currently 52 years old.

His biography is available in 22 different languages on Wikipedia (down from 23 in 2024). Noriaki Asakura is the 4,806th most popular soccer player (up from 11,559th in 2024), the 1,682nd most popular biography from Japan (up from 2,666th in 2019) and the 450th most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Noriaki Asakura by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Noriaki Asakura ranks 4,806 out of 21,273Before him are Vasile Deheleanu, Dragutin Najdanović, Célestin Delmer, Hisashi Kato, Juan Ignacio Basaguren, and Pablo Sarabia. After him are Emiliano Mondonico, Mike Summerbee, Gary Kelly, Alfredo Sánchez, Francesco Calzona, and Pedro Munitis.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1973, Noriaki Asakura ranks 268Before him are Inés Sastre, Barret Oliver, Jung Woo-sung, Amr Waked, Fabio Lione, and Denis Urubko. After him are Élodie Bouchez, Samuel Benchetrit, Aitor Karanka, Róisín Murphy, Juan Manuel Márquez, and Virginia Ruano Pascual.

Others Born in 1973

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Noriaki Asakura ranks 1,681 out of 6,245Before him are Kinya Takehara (1974), Rikiya Koyama (1963), Katsuya Okada (1953), Megumi Torigoe (1950), and Hisashi Kato (1956). After him are Takanori Nishikawa (1970), Sugao Kambe (1961), Tomio Okamura (1972), Akira Kawaguchi (1967), Yutaka Ozaki (1965), Masataka Imai (1959), and Tomoki Kamioka (1998).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Noriaki Asakura ranks 450Before him are Takeshi Watanabe (1972), Shogo Sakurai (1984), Yuto Nagatomo (1986), Kinya Takehara (1974), Megumi Torigoe (1950), and Hisashi Kato (1956). After him are Sugao Kambe (1961), Akira Kawaguchi (1967), Masataka Imai (1959), Tomoki Kamioka (1998), Atsushi Ito (1983), and Keisuke Moriya (1986).