SOCCER PLAYER

Patxi Ferreira

1967 - Today

Photo of Patxi Ferreira

Icon of person Patxi Ferreira

Francisco 'Patxi' Ferreira Colmenero (born 22 May 1967) is a Spanish football coach and former player who played as a central defender. He is the current assistant manager of UD Almería. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Patxi Ferreira is the 11,944th most popular soccer player (down from 10,869th in 2019), the 2,719th most popular biography from Spain (down from 2,672nd in 2019) and the 735th most popular Spanish Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Patxi Ferreira by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Patxi Ferreira ranks 11,944 out of 21,273Before him are Hamza Younés, Abdullah Otayf, Myron Boadu, Pekka Lagerblom, Corona, and Diogo Luís Santo. After him are Sara Thunebro, Fumitake Miura, Jean Marie Dongou, Alo Bärengrub, Rumi Utsugi, and Taisir Al-Jassim.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1967, Patxi Ferreira ranks 842Before him are Marcus Chong, Yoshimasa Suda, Rahul Bose, Nadezhda Talanova, LTJ Bukem, and Frode Olsen. After him are Alain Claude Bilie By Nze, Lew Temple, Liz Phair, Naruyuki Naito, Bhanupriya, and Mick Mulvaney.

Others Born in 1967

Go to all Rankings

In Spain

Among people born in Spain, Patxi Ferreira ranks 2,719 out of 3,355Before him are Pere Riba (1988), Sergio García (1980), Jaime Gavilán (1985), Sara Sorribes Tormo (1996), José Vicente García (1972), and Corona (1981). After him are Mireia Belmonte (1990), Begoña Fernández (1980), Laura Gallego García (1977), Javi Varas (1982), Andrea Fuentes (1983), and Oriol Servià (1974).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Spain

Among soccer players born in Spain, Patxi Ferreira ranks 735Before him are Santi Mina (1995), Marc Valiente (1987), David Soria (1993), Mikel Aranburu (1979), Jaime Gavilán (1985), and Corona (1981). After him are Javi Varas (1982), Sergio Ballesteros (1975), Jaime Mata (1988), Ander Garitano (1969), David Barral (1983), and Juankar (1990).