SOCCER PLAYER

Peter Hlinka

1978 - Today

Photo of Peter Hlinka

Icon of person Peter Hlinka

Peter Hlinka (born 5 December 1978) is a Slovak professional football manager and former player who played as a midfielder. He was most recently in charge of Inter Bratislava. Prior to joining Inter, he was a head coach of Tatran Prešov. He competed for Slovakia at the 2000 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 16 different languages on Wikipedia. Peter Hlinka is the 11,603rd most popular soccer player (down from 9,717th in 2024), the 350th most popular biography from Slovakia (down from 312th in 2019) and the 90th most popular Slovak Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Peter Hlinka by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Peter Hlinka ranks 11,603 out of 21,273Before him are Salvador Carmona, Djalma Campos, Ricardo Santos, Anders Christiansen, Denis Odoi, and Oktay Derelioğlu. After him are Kevin Moran, Piotr Sowisz, Nigel Spink, Ibán Cuadrado, Alberto Marcos Rey, and Shkëlzen Gashi.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1978, Peter Hlinka ranks 822Before him are Zhang Zhong, Hanna Maliar, David Aebischer, Dwayne De Rosario, Kali, and Killing of Jean Charles de Menezes. After him are Perez Hilton, Magdalena Mielcarz, Claudia Galli, Lara Cox, Alessandro Fei, and Rustam Saidov.

Others Born in 1978

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Peter Hlinka ranks 350 out of 418Before him are Slavomír Kňazovický (1969), Michal Handzuš (1977), Barbara Nedeljáková (1979), Denis Vavro (1996), Michal Šimečka (1984), and Tatiana Pauhofová (1983). After him are Branko Radivojevič (1980), Lukáš Haraslín (1996), Zuzana Rehák-Štefečeková (1984), Viktor Pečovský (1983), Norbert Gombos (1990), and Twiins (1986).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Slovakia

Among soccer players born in Slovakia, Peter Hlinka ranks 90Before him are Filip Hološko (1984), Adam Nemec (1985), Kamil Čontofalský (1978), Alex Král (1998), Matúš Kozáčik (1983), and Denis Vavro (1996). After him are Lukáš Haraslín (1996), Viktor Pečovský (1983), Vladimír Janočko (1976), Norbert Gyömbér (1992), Tamás Priskin (1986), and Patrik Hrošovský (1992).