SOCCER PLAYER

Oliver Sorg

1990 - Today

Photo of Oliver Sorg

Icon of person Oliver Sorg

Oliver Sorg (born 29 May 1990) is a German professional footballer who plays as a right back. Since 2021, he is without a club. A veteran of three relegations from and one promotion to the Bundesliga, Sorg has played four seasons at SC Freiburg and four seasons at Hannover 96. He also earned a cap for Germany in 2014. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Oliver Sorg is the 16,154th most popular soccer player (down from 15,222nd in 2019), the 6,933rd most popular biography from Germany (down from 6,904th in 2019) and the 762nd most popular German Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Oliver Sorg by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Oliver Sorg ranks 16,154 out of 21,273Before him are Ataru Esaka, Federico Mancuello, Duckens Nazon, Jeff Cunningham, Ethan Ampadu, and Boris Borisovich Rotenberg. After him are Alexander Schlager, Masafumi Nakaguchi, Nurbol Zhumaskaliyev, Matt Lam, Toru Miyamoto, and Jonathan Copete.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1990, Oliver Sorg ranks 1,042Before him are Jordan Spence, Youssouf M'Changama, Deni Alar, David Jelínek, Florian Sotoca, and Marko Vejinović. After him are Pál Joensen, Marcus Nyman, Matt Prokop, Raisa, Angy Fernández, and Luka Stepančić.

Others Born in 1990

Go to all Rankings

In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Oliver Sorg ranks 6,936 out of 7,253Before him are Ricarda Lang (1994), Kimberly Williams (null), Márton Dárdai (2002), Leon Balogun (1988), Daniel Deusser (1981), and Lukas Märtens (2001). After him are Christian Reitz (1987), Petrissa Solja (1994), Kacper Przybyłko (1993), Dennis Diekmeier (1989), Gabriel Vidović (2003), and Johannes van den Bergh (1986).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Germany

Among soccer players born in Germany, Oliver Sorg ranks 762Before him are Alexander Meyer (1991), Marco Höger (1989), Max Grün (1987), Richard Sukuta-Pasu (1990), Márton Dárdai (2002), and Leon Balogun (1988). After him are Kacper Przybyłko (1993), Dennis Diekmeier (1989), Gabriel Vidović (2003), Johannes van den Bergh (1986), Marco Terrazzino (1991), and Christian Clemens (1991).