SOCCER PLAYER

Roberto Nurse

1983 - Today

Photo of Roberto Nurse

Icon of person Roberto Nurse

Roberto Antonio Nurse Anguiano (born 16 December 1983) is a former professional footballer who played as a striker. Born in Mexico, he played for the Panama national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Roberto Nurse is the 18,428th most popular soccer player (down from 16,394th in 2019), the 716th most popular biography from Mexico (down from 695th in 2019) and the 218th most popular Mexican Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Roberto Nurse by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Roberto Nurse ranks 18,428 out of 21,273Before him are Jeremy Christie, Aymen Dahmen, Loïs Diony, Masafumi Maeda, Julián Cuesta, and Kenji Baba. After him are Marko Milinković, Rafał Augustyniak, Pedro Franco, Sho Inagaki, Leo Kokubo, and Sho Shimoji.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Roberto Nurse ranks 1,393Before him are Schalk Burger, Daiki Tamori, Jeremy Christie, Ike Diogu, Masafumi Maeda, and Melanie Kok. After him are Mashrafe Mortaza, Yoshihito Fujita, David Price, Stanislav Donets, Sergei Azarov, and Hiroshi Nakano.

Others Born in 1983

Go to all Rankings

In Mexico

Among people born in Mexico, Roberto Nurse ranks 716 out of 729Before him are Luis Montes (1986), Javier Orozco (1987), Elías Hernández (1988), Germán Sánchez (1992), Tatiana Ortiz (1984), and Ramiro Peña (1985). After him are Iván García (1993), Luis Cruz (1984), Alfonso González (1994), Jesús Dueñas (1989), José Juan Macías (1999), and Humberto Carrillo (1995).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Mexico

Among soccer players born in Mexico, Roberto Nurse ranks 218Before him are José Juan Vázquez (1988), Carlos Peña (1990), Jorge Enríquez (1991), Luis Montes (1986), Javier Orozco (1987), and Elías Hernández (1988). After him are Alfonso González (1994), Jesús Dueñas (1989), José Juan Macías (1999), Érick Aguirre (1997), Dárvin Chávez (1989), and José Antonio Rodríguez (1992).