SOCCER PLAYER

Saúl Martínez

1976 - Today

Photo of Saúl Martínez

Icon of person Saúl Martínez

Saúl Asael Martínez Álvarez (Latin American Spanish: [saˈul maɾˈtines]; born 29 January 1976) is a Honduran former football forward who last played for Marathón. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Saúl Martínez is the 4,677th most popular soccer player (up from 6,334th in 2019), the 26th most popular biography from Honduras (up from 31st in 2019) and the 2nd most popular Honduran Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Saúl Martínez by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Saúl Martínez ranks 4,677 out of 21,273Before him are Júnior Baiano, Luis Regueiro, Dani Shmulevich-Rom, Daniel da Silva, Yerry Mina, and Saul Malatrasi. After him are Michel Der Zakarian, Jackson Martínez, Yngve Brodd, Graham Potter, Mustapha Choukri, and Fernando Navarro.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1976, Saúl Martínez ranks 209Before him are Emma de Caunes, Lars Ricken, Troy Baker, Ricardinho, Jessica Capshaw, and Vladimir Samsonov. After him are Kazumasa Shimizu, Óscar Freire, Kevin Alejandro, Chang Chen, Ľudovít Ódor, and Daijiro Kato.

Others Born in 1976

Go to all Rankings

In Honduras

Among people born in Honduras, Saúl Martínez ranks 26 out of 84Before him are Carlos Roberto Flores (1950), Ramón Ernesto Cruz Uclés (1903), Policarpo Paz García (1932), Julio Lozano Díaz (1885), David Suazo (1979), and Juan Alberto Melgar Castro (1930). After him are Rafael López Gutiérrez (1854), Berta Cáceres (1971), Chelato Uclés (1940), José Cardona (1939), Carlos Pavón (1973), and Celso Güity (1958).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Honduras

Among soccer players born in Honduras, Saúl Martínez ranks 2Before him are David Suazo (1979). After him are José Cardona (1939), Carlos Pavón (1973), Celso Güity (1958), Jaime Villegas (1950), Porfirio Armando Betancourt (1957), Roberto Bailey (1952), Amado Guevara (1976), Noel Valladares (1977), Héctor Zelaya (1958), and Gilberto Yearwood (1956).