BASKETBALL PLAYER

Sandro Nicević

1976 - Today

Photo of Sandro Nicević

Icon of person Sandro Nicević

Sandro Nicević (born 16 June 1976 in Pula, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia) is a retired Croatian professional basketball player, who last played for Orlandina Basket in the Italian Serie A. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia. Sandro Nicević is the 965th most popular basketball player (up from 980th in 2024), the 612th most popular biography from Croatia (down from 577th in 2019) and the 41st most popular Croatian Basketball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Sandro Nicević by language

Loading...

Among BASKETBALL PLAYERS

Among basketball players, Sandro Nicević ranks 965 out of 1,757Before him are Nihad Đedović, Jamal Murray, David Lee, Wayman Tisdale, Darrell Armstrong, and Keith Langford. After him are Jonas Jerebko, Glenn Robinson, Laurent Sciarra, Immanuel Quickley, Ann Meyers, and Jaycee Carroll.

Most Popular Basketball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1976, Sandro Nicević ranks 1,005Before him are Aidyn Smagulov, Keiichiro Nakano, Naoki Takahashi, Fuad Aslanov, Oren Lavie, and Kyrsten Sinema. After him are Jafar Irismetov, Moon Dae-sung, Eddy Wata, Valeria Straneo, Koji Arimura, and Leigh Nash.

Others Born in 1976

Go to all Rankings

In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Sandro Nicević ranks 612 out of 700Before him are Josip Radošević (1994), Leona Paraminski (1979), Damir Mikec (1984), Mia Dimšić (1992), Damir Martin (1988), and Josip Juranović (1995). After him are Saša Bjelanović (1979), Lovro Zovko (1981), Damir Kedžo (1987), Arijan Ademi (1991), Barbara Matić (1994), and Valent Sinković (1988).

Among BASKETBALL PLAYERS In Croatia

Among basketball players born in Croatia, Sandro Nicević ranks 41Before him are Milan Mačvan (1989), Marko Tomas (1985), Dario Šarić (1994), Krešimir Lončar (1983), Ante Žižić (1997), and Nikola Radulović (1973). After him are Antonija Sandrić (1988), Luka Žorić (1984), Davor Kus (1978), Marko Banić (1984), Kosta Perović (1985), and Duško Savanović (1983).