SOCCER PLAYER

René-Pierre Quentin

1943 - Today

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René-Pierre Quentin (born 5 August 1943) is a former Swiss football player. He got 34 caps and 9 goals for Switzerland, playing two games at the 1966 World Cup. He scored Switzerland's only goal in the tournament, against Spain. He is the "uncle" of Yvan, also Swiss international. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. René-Pierre Quentin is the 4,516th most popular soccer player (down from 3,952nd in 2019), the 607th most popular biography from Switzerland (down from 582nd in 2019) and the 48th most popular Swiss Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, René-Pierre Quentin ranks 4,516 out of 21,273Before him are David Suazo, Dan Coe, Jérémy Toulalan, Custódio Pinto, Naoko Nishigai, and Adam Nawałka. After him are Shinichi Morishita, Manuel Rodríguez, Jorge Góngora, Shuta Araki, Ivan Klasnić, and Gaël Clichy.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1943, René-Pierre Quentin ranks 588Before him are Nobuko Imai, Manfred Schnelldorfer, Dieter Schubert, Rolf Edling, Wilhelm Genazino, and Martha Rosler. After him are Johnny Höglin, Veronica Hamel, Erwin Huber, Donald Kalpokas, Jeffrey Tate, and Van Dyke Parks.

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In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, René-Pierre Quentin ranks 607 out of 1,015Before him are Othmar Ammann (1879), Denise Biellmann (1962), Klaus Tschütscher (1967), Diogo Costa (1999), Albert Scherrer (1908), and Denis Oswald (1947). After him are Erika Hess (1962), Urs Bühler (1971), Marco Giampaolo (1967), Oswald Zappelli (1913), Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker (1939), and Alain Geiger (1960).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Switzerland

Among soccer players born in Switzerland, René-Pierre Quentin ranks 48Before him are Lauro Amadò (1912), Ricardo Rodríguez (1992), Kurt Stettler (1932), Kubilay Türkyilmaz (1967), Johann Vogel (1977), and Diogo Costa (1999). After him are Marco Giampaolo (1967), Alain Geiger (1960), Georges Stuber (1925), Fabio Celestini (1975), Diego Benaglio (1983), and Jean Tamini (1919).