HOCKEY PLAYER

Pavel Patera

1971 - Today

Photo of Pavel Patera

Icon of person Pavel Patera

Pavel Patera (born September 6, 1971) is a Czech former professional ice hockey player. Patera was drafted by the Dallas Stars at 1998 NHL Entry Draft as the 153rd pick overall. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Pavel Patera is the 261st most popular hockey player (down from 205th in 2019), the 1,012th most popular biography from Czechia (down from 975th in 2019) and the 39th most popular Czech Hockey Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Pavel Patera by language

Loading...

Among HOCKEY PLAYERS

Among hockey players, Pavel Patera ranks 261 out of 676Before him are Maxim Afinogenov, Steven Stamkos, Roman Hamrlík, Niklas Kronwall, Cam Neely, and David Výborný. After him are Fredrik Modin, Tomas Holmström, Rod Brind'Amour, Viktor Kozlov, Jan Marek, and Alexander Galimov.

Most Popular Hockey Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1971, Pavel Patera ranks 859Before him are Paul Sparks, Tanoka Beard, Elisa Donovan, Kjersti Grini, Hideo Yoshizawa, and Sean Spicer. After him are Takehito Suzuki, Anja Karliczek, Rachel Goswell, Kim Mi-jung, Giancarlo Judica Cordiglia, and Picabo Street.

Others Born in 1971

Go to all Rankings

In Czechia

Among people born in Czechia, Pavel Patera ranks 1,012 out of 1,200Before him are Ondřej Čelůstka (1989), Martin Hřídel (1968), Vítězslav Veselý (1983), Jan Hájek (1983), Tomáš Jun (1983), and David Výborný (1975). After him are Petr Vlček (1973), Jan Marek (1979), David Sánchez (null), Jaroslav Špaček (1974), Tomáš Koubek (1992), and Jan Hudec (1981).

Among HOCKEY PLAYERS In Czechia

Among hockey players born in Czechia, Pavel Patera ranks 39Before him are Martin Procházka (1972), Tomáš Plekanec (1982), Jan Čaloun (1972), Jiří Dopita (1968), Roman Hamrlík (1974), and David Výborný (1975). After him are Jan Marek (1979), Jaroslav Špaček (1974), Marek Malík (1975), Václav Prospal (1975), Martin Erat (1981), and Jan Bulis (1978).