SOCCER PLAYER

Oleh Shelayev

1976 - Today

Photo of Oleh Shelayev

Icon of person Oleh Shelayev

Oleh Mykolayovych Shelayev (Ukrainian: Олег Миколайович Шелаєв, born 5 November 1976) is a Ukrainian former international footballer. He is among the top-3 most capped footballers of the Ukrainian Premier League. Currently he is an assistant coach of Ruslan Kostyshyn at Kolos Kovalivka. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Oleh Shelayev is the 9,958th most popular soccer player (down from 9,658th in 2019), the 1,148th most popular biography from Ukraine (up from 1,160th in 2019) and the 90th most popular Ukrainian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Oleh Shelayev by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Oleh Shelayev ranks 9,958 out of 21,273Before him are Javi Venta, Erik Hoftun, Heinz Lindner, Des Walker, Fábio Santos, and Stanislav Manolev. After him are Marco Sandy, Gaëtan Englebert, Cyrille Regis, Dmitri Khokhlov, Yuki Takita, and Nabil El Zhar.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1976, Oleh Shelayev ranks 679Before him are Michele Frangilli, Enric Duran, Yegor Titov, Shelley Conn, Delio Toledo, and Susanne Ljungskog. After him are Gaëtan Englebert, Jeremy Wotherspoon, Rama Yade, María Adánez, Ionela Târlea, and Julio César Pinheiro.

Others Born in 1976

Go to all Rankings

In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Oleh Shelayev ranks 1,148 out of 1,365Before him are Tetyana Tereshchuk-Antipova (1969), Iryna Merleni (1982), Kira Rudik (1985), Alexandra Shevchenko (1988), Tetiana Ostashchenko (1974), and Illya Zabarnyi (2002). After him are Volodymir Gustov (1977), Maksim Romaschenko (1976), Joshua Green (null), NK (1987), Maruv (1992), and Alexey Voyevoda (1980).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Ukraine

Among soccer players born in Ukraine, Oleh Shelayev ranks 90Before him are Viktor Kovalenko (1996), Denys Boyko (1988), Roman Zozulya (1989), Volodymyr Yezerskiy (1976), Vitaliy Mykolenko (1999), and Illya Zabarnyi (2002). After him are Maksim Romaschenko (1976), Taras Mykhalyk (1983), Oleksandr Zubkov (1996), Oleksandr Horyainov (1975), Vyacheslav Sviderskyi (1979), and Serhiy Kryvtsov (1991).