SOCCER PLAYER

Radostin Kishishev

1974 - Today

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Radostin Prodanov Kishishev (Bulgarian: Радостин Проданов Кишишев; born 30 July 1974) is a Bulgarian former professional footballer who works as director of youth/U19 coach of Chernomorets 1919. Kishishev earned 88 caps for Bulgaria, representing them at Euro 96 and the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Radostin Kishishev is the 10,354th most popular soccer player (down from 9,696th in 2019), the 352nd most popular biography from Bulgaria (up from 354th in 2019) and the 64th most popular Bulgarian Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Radostin Kishishev ranks 10,354 out of 21,273Before him are Gary Gillespie, Derek Dougan, Yusuke Adachi, Thomas Buffel, Leroy Fer, and Patrick Mtiliga. After him are Sani Kaita, Fahad Al-Mehallel, Ritchie De Laet, Rafael Santos Borré, Julio César de León, and Alex Brosque.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Radostin Kishishev ranks 740Before him are Michael Kohlmann, Julio César Enciso, Sébastien Hinault, Sergey Sharikov, Lucas Arnold Ker, and Toni Tauler. After him are Tomomi Kahara, Antoine Sibierski, Heather Headley, Marcus Camby, Camilla Martin, and Marianne Timmer.

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In Bulgaria

Among people born in Bulgaria, Radostin Kishishev ranks 352 out of 415Before him are Stanka Zlateva (1983), Konstantina Kouneva (1964), Nikolay Bukhalov (1967), Marian Hristov (1973), Sunay Erdem (1971), and Elena Pampoulova (1972). After him are Tereza Marinova (1977), Sevdalin Marinov (1968), Gosho Ginchev (1969), Svetla Dimitrova (1970), Tervel Pulev (1983), and Gloria (1973).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Bulgaria

Among soccer players born in Bulgaria, Radostin Kishishev ranks 64Before him are Ayan Sadakov (1961), Georgi Dimitrov (1959), Dimitar Rangelov (1983), Petar Hubchev (1964), Stanislav Manolev (1985), and Marian Hristov (1973). After him are Gosho Ginchev (1969), Zdravko Lazarov (1976), Adalbert Zafirov (1969), Vladimir Manchev (1977), Georgi Peev (1979), and Ivelin Popov (1987).