SOCCER PLAYER

Pedro Araya Toro

1942 - Today

Photo of Pedro Araya Toro

Icon of person Pedro Araya Toro

Pedro Damián Araya Toro (born 23 January 1942), known as Pedro Araya, is a Chilean former football player who played as a right winger. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Pedro Araya Toro is the 5,330th most popular soccer player (up from 5,368th in 2019), the 174th most popular biography from Chile (up from 183rd in 2019) and the 63rd most popular Chilean Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Pedro Araya Toro by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Pedro Araya Toro ranks 5,330 out of 21,273Before him are Guillermo Díaz, Peter Persidis, Jiro Hiratsuka, Raúl Magaña, Andy van der Meyde, and Petre Steinbach. After him are Alex Miller, Munir El Haddadi, Daniel Xuereb, Marco Amelia, Marcos Paulo, and Takeshi Okamoto.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1942, Pedro Araya Toro ranks 630Before him are Jimmy Miller, Eddie Kramer, Gerhard Roth, Butch Otter, Salim Ahmed Salim, and Juan Gisbert Sr.. After him are Monique Ohsan Bellepeau, Alex Stepney, Annette Funicello, Ned Block, Gennady Logofet, and Allen Daviau.

Others Born in 1942

Go to all Rankings

In Chile

Among people born in Chile, Pedro Araya Toro ranks 174 out of 321Before him are Jerónimo Méndez (1887), José Antonio Kast (1966), Humberto Donoso (1938), Juan Olivares (1941), Mauricio Isla (1988), and Guillermo Díaz (1930). After him are Alfredo Castro (1955), Sergio Ahumada (1948), Rolando García (1942), Ignacio Prieto (1943), Eladio Rojas (1934), and Andrés Prieto (1928).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Chile

Among soccer players born in Chile, Pedro Araya Toro ranks 63Before him are Fernando Campos (1923), Carlos Contreras (1938), Humberto Donoso (1938), Juan Olivares (1941), Mauricio Isla (1988), and Guillermo Díaz (1930). After him are Sergio Ahumada (1948), Rolando García (1942), Eladio Rojas (1934), Andrés Prieto (1928), Leopoldo Vallejos (1944), and Adán Godoy (1936).