SOCCER PLAYER

Tahar El Khalej

1968 - Today

Photo of Tahar El Khalej

Icon of person Tahar El Khalej

Tahar El Khalej (Arabic: الطاهر الخلج, romanized: Taher Lakhlej; born 16 June 1968) is a Moroccan former footballer who played as a defender. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Tahar El Khalej is the 8,099th most popular soccer player (down from 6,542nd in 2019), the 190th most popular biography from Morocco (down from 179th in 2019) and the 52nd most popular Moroccan Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Tahar El Khalej by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Tahar El Khalej ranks 8,099 out of 21,273Before him are Per Frimann, Andreas Görlitz, Ryan Taylor, Orestis Karnezis, Júlio César, and Manuel Lanzini. After him are Gabriel Tamaș, Tomoo Kudaka, Moumouni Dagano, Óscar Arizaga, Ayan Sadakov, and Amin Younes.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1968, Tahar El Khalej ranks 591Before him are Charlotte Valandrey, Lisa Chappell, Theo de Raadt, Alicia Coppola, Dimitri Diatchenko, and Brahim Lahlafi. After him are Noordin Mohammad Top, Silvio Fauner, Emilija Kokić, Cate Shortland, Takahiro Endo, and Anne Briand.

Others Born in 1968

Go to all Rankings

In Morocco

Among people born in Morocco, Tahar El Khalej ranks 190 out of 264Before him are Salah Hissou (1972), Abdelkrim El Hadrioui (1972), Salahdine Hmied (1961), Mohammed Achik (1965), Khalid Boulami (1969), and Brahim Lahlafi (1968). After him are Ahmed Bahja (1970), Aziz Bouhaddouz (1987), Saad Lamjarred (1985), Lahcen Abrami (1969), Mounir Fatmi (1970), and Abdelhamid Sabiri (1996).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Morocco

Among soccer players born in Morocco, Tahar El Khalej ranks 52Before him are Nacer Abdellah (1966), Khalil Azmi (1964), Abdeslam Laghrissi (1962), Saïd Chiba (1970), Abdelkrim El Hadrioui (1972), and Salahdine Hmied (1961). After him are Ahmed Bahja (1970), Aziz Bouhaddouz (1987), Lahcen Abrami (1969), Abdelhamid Sabiri (1996), Badr El Kaddouri (1981), and Youssouf Hadji (1980).