SOCCER PLAYER

Samu Aghehowa

2004 - Today

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Samuel "Samu" Omorodion Aghehowa (born 5 May 2004) is a Spanish professional footballer who plays as a forward for Primeira Liga club Porto and the Spain national team. After coming through Granada's youth academy, Aghehowa began playing for the club's reserve team in 2022, being promoted to the first team in 2023. He subsequently signed with Atlético Madrid, being immediately loaned to La Liga club Alavés. In August 2024, Aghehowa joined Porto for a transfer fee of €15 million. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 30 different languages on Wikipedia. Samu Aghehowa is the 9,260th most popular soccer player, the 2,435th most popular biography from Spain and the 588th most popular Spanish Soccer Player.

Samu Aghehowa, the Spanish footballer born in 2004, is most famous for his role as a forward in youth football, particularly for his performances in the FC Barcelona youth academy. He is recognized for his technical skills and potential to develop into a professional player.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 2004, Samu Aghehowa ranks 21Before him are Roméo Lavia, Nico Paz, Gonzalo García, Grace VanderWaal, Jamie Bynoe-Gittens, and Alexandra Trusova. After him are Ângelo Gabriel, Amira Willighagen, Anna Shcherbakova, Aleksandar Pavlović, Noah Schnapp, and Stefan Bajcetic.

Others Born in 2004

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In Spain

Among people born in Spain, Samu Aghehowa ranks 2,435 out of 3,355Before him are Kim Dong-hyeon (null), Mikel Lasa (1971), John Collins (null), Patxi Salinas (1963), José Manuel Soria (1958), and Jesús Solana (1964). After him are Rafael Pascual (1970), Óscar Sevilla (1976), Toni Jiménez (1970), Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (1999), Juanele (1971), and Alberto Botía (1989).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Spain

Among soccer players born in Spain, Samu Aghehowa ranks 588Before him are Álvaro Domínguez (1989), Javier Farinós (1978), Pablo Orbaiz (1979), Mikel Lasa (1971), Patxi Salinas (1963), and Jesús Solana (1964). After him are Toni Jiménez (1970), Juanele (1971), Alberto Botía (1989), Antoni Lima (1970), Francisco Yeste (1979), and Pablo Marí (1993).