SOCCER PLAYER

Pedro Rebocho

1995 - Today

Photo of Pedro Rebocho

Icon of person Pedro Rebocho

Pedro Miguel Braga Rebocho (born 23 January 1995) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Saudi Pro League club Al-Khaleej. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 15 different languages on Wikipedia. Pedro Rebocho is the 20,812th most popular soccer player (down from 16,910th in 2024), the 687th most popular biography from Portugal (down from 626th in 2019) and the 254th most popular Portuguese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Pedro Rebocho by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Pedro Rebocho ranks 20,812 out of 21,273Before him are Noritaka Fujisawa, Frédéric Mendy, Emil Bohinen, Koji Noda, Mikael Anderson, and Yuki Kobayashi. After him are Raúl Goni, Koji Suzuki, Niko Gießelmann, Reza Haghighi, Sloan Privat, and Formose Mendy.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1995, Pedro Rebocho ranks 964Before him are Taxiarchis Fountas, Jean Quiquampoix, Patrick McCaw, Grigoriy Tarasevich, Ethan Horvath, and Ben Broeders. After him are Clément Russo, Julia Goldani Telles, Rémi Walter, Rubén Duarte, Kim A-lang, and Luca Sangalli.

Others Born in 1995

Go to all Rankings

In Portugal

Among people born in Portugal, Pedro Rebocho ranks 687 out of 633Before him are Tiago Pereira (1975), Tomás Podstawski (1995), Daniel Candeias (1988), Pedro Sousa (1988), Patrícia Sampaio (1999), and Tomás Tavares (2001). After him are André Almeida (2000), Dário Essugo (2005), Bruno Jordão (1998), Diogo Gonçalves (1997), Rui Bragança (1991), and Ana Cabecinha (1984).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Portugal

Among soccer players born in Portugal, Pedro Rebocho ranks 254Before him are Bruno Gaspar (1993), Lucas João (1993), Tiago Pereira (1975), Tomás Podstawski (1995), Daniel Candeias (1988), and Tomás Tavares (2001). After him are André Almeida (2000), Dário Essugo (2005), Bruno Jordão (1998), Diogo Gonçalves (1997), Luís Martins (1992), and Carlos Forbs (2004).