SOCCER PLAYER

Stanislav Seman

1952 - Today

Photo of Stanislav Seman

Icon of person Stanislav Seman

Stanislav Seman (born 8 August 1952) is a former football goalkeeper from Czechoslovakia. He was a member of the national team that won the gold medal at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. Seman obtained a total number of fifteen caps for his native country, between 30 April 1980 and 20 June 1982. He was born in Košice. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Stanislav Seman is the 3,696th most popular soccer player (down from 3,010th in 2019), the 209th most popular biography from Slovakia (down from 187th in 2019) and the 42nd most popular Slovak Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Stanislav Seman by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Stanislav Seman ranks 3,696 out of 21,273Before him are Marco Bode, Edu Gaspar, Frank Ordenewitz, Octacílio, Henri Françillon, and Giuseppe Viani. After him are Manoelzinho, Marko Elsner, Gabi, Jeferson Antonio Alves Dupin, Alberto Mario González, and José Bosingwa.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1952, Stanislav Seman ranks 434Before him are Richard Wagner, Duncan Regehr, Ricardo Villa, Mokhtar Hasni, Joe Alaskey, and Jiichiro Date. After him are Kama Sywor Kamanda, Dragan Šakota, John L. Hennessy, Vittorio Sgarbi, Rosemarie Trockel, and Brigitte Engerer.

Others Born in 1952

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Stanislav Seman ranks 209 out of 418Before him are Albín Brunovský (1935), Ján Babjak (1953), Milan Rúfus (1928), Kálmán Tihanyi (1897), István Bittó (1822), and Janko Jesenský (1874). After him are Jozef Chovanec (1960), János Fadrusz (1858), Dušan Galis (1949), Elena Maróthy-Šoltésová (1855), Ivan Bella (1964), and Ján Čapkovič (1948).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Slovakia

Among soccer players born in Slovakia, Stanislav Seman ranks 42Before him are Jozef Čapkovič (1948), Karol Jokl (1945), Ladislav Pavlovič (1926), Milan Škriniar (1995), Anton Moravčík (1931), and Ján Kocian (1958). After him are Jozef Chovanec (1960), Dušan Galis (1949), Ján Čapkovič (1948), Róbert Vittek (1982), Vladimír Weiss (1989), and Milan Luhový (1963).