SOCCER PLAYER

Tengiz Sulakvelidze

1956 - Today

Photo of Tengiz Sulakvelidze

Icon of person Tengiz Sulakvelidze

Tengiz Grigoriyevich Sulakvelidze (Georgian: თენგიზ სულაქველიძე; born 23 July 1956) is a Georgian former professional footballer who played as a defender. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Tengiz Sulakvelidze is the 2,892nd most popular soccer player (down from 2,101st in 2019), the 203rd most popular biography from Georgia (down from 177th in 2019) and the 11th most popular Georgian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Tengiz Sulakvelidze by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Tengiz Sulakvelidze ranks 2,892 out of 21,273Before him are Ion Bogdan, Juan Acuña, Józef Młynarczyk, Erich Hof, Agustín Sancho, and Miguel Ángel Brindisi. After him are Abdallah Lamrani, Masafumi Terada, Antonio Betancort, Jasper Cillessen, Li Chan-myung, and Alberto Gallardo.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1956, Tengiz Sulakvelidze ranks 317Before him are Michael Spinks, Paul Lockhart, Nigel Kennedy, Joe Montana, Michael Hoffman, and Jesús Huerta de Soto. After him are Edson Tavares, David E. Kelley, Pierre Lévy, Andy Goldsworthy, László Kiss, and Gary Ross.

Others Born in 1956

Go to all Rankings

In Georgia

Among people born in Georgia, Tengiz Sulakvelidze ranks 203 out of 406Before him are Alexander P. de Seversky (1894), Gurgen Dalibaltayan (1926), Shota Chochishvili (1950), Irakli Garibashvili (1982), David V of Georgia (1113), and Revaz Chkheidze (1926). After him are Bogdan Kobulov (1904), Dilara Aliyeva (1929), Revaz Gabriadze (1936), Rafael Chimishkyan (1929), Arpenik Nalbandyan (1916), and Nina Ananiashvili (1963).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Georgia

Among soccer players born in Georgia, Tengiz Sulakvelidze ranks 11Before him are David Kipiani (1951), Givi Chokheli (1937), Shota Arveladze (1973), Boris Paichadze (1915), Kakhi Asatiani (1947), and Anzor Kavazashvili (1940). After him are Givi Nodia (1948), Sergo Kotrikadze (1936), Zaur Kaloev (1931), Levan Kobiashvili (1977), Ramaz Urushadze (1939), and Archil Arveladze (1973).