SOCCER PLAYER

Rúben Bareño

1944 - Today

Photo of Rúben Bareño

Icon of person Rúben Bareño

Ruben Laudelino Bareño Silva (born 23 January 1944) is a Uruguayan football forward who played for Uruguay in the 1970 FIFA World Cup. He also played for C.A. Cerro. In Argentina, he was played in Racing. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Rúben Bareño is the 5,361st most popular soccer player (up from 5,817th in 2019), the 249th most popular biography from Uruguay (up from 265th in 2019) and the 141st most popular Uruguayan Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Rúben Bareño by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Rúben Bareño ranks 5,361 out of 21,273Before him are Ion Dumitru, Marc Baecke, Pat Rice, Marco Etcheverry, Kiril Rakarov, and Teofilo Spasojević. After him are Gianfranco Bedin, Luís Oliveira, Jan Furtok, Mikhail Ogonkov, Magno Alves, and Hironori Nagamine.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1944, Rúben Bareño ranks 652Before him are James Arthur, Colm Wilkinson, Itzhak Vissoker, Carl I. Hagen, Neil Innes, and Fidélis. After him are John Sebastian, Buddhadeb Dasgupta, Spartaco Landini, Dave Edmunds, Jac Nellemann, and Neroli Fairhall.

Others Born in 1944

Go to all Rankings

In Uruguay

Among people born in Uruguay, Rúben Bareño ranks 249 out of 444Before him are Marcelo Zalayeta (1978), José Naya (1896), Asdrúbal Fontes Bayardo (1922), Darwin Núñez (1999), Rodolfo Nin Novoa (1948), and Walter Corbo (1949). After him are Martín Lasarte (1961), Darío Silva (1972), Martín Vázquez (1969), Cayetano Saporiti (1887), Walter Pandiani (1976), and Baudilio Jáuregui (1945).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Uruguay

Among soccer players born in Uruguay, Rúben Bareño ranks 141Before him are Álvaro Pereira (1985), Gustavo de Simone (1948), Marcelo Zalayeta (1978), José Naya (1896), Darwin Núñez (1999), and Walter Corbo (1949). After him are Martín Lasarte (1961), Darío Silva (1972), Cayetano Saporiti (1887), Walter Pandiani (1976), Baudilio Jáuregui (1945), and Humberto Tomasina (1898).