SOCCER PLAYER

Thomas Allofs

1959 - Today

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Thomas Allofs (born 17 November 1959) is a German former professional footballer who played as a striker. The younger brother of another footballer, Klaus Allofs, he was a prolific goalscorer, scoring nearly 200 overall goals as a professional, always playing in the Bundesliga (a brief spell in France notwithstanding). Allofs represented West Germany at the 1982 World Cup. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Thomas Allofs is the 3,481st most popular soccer player (down from 3,343rd in 2019), the 4,856th most popular biography from Germany (down from 4,837th in 2019) and the 232nd most popular German Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Thomas Allofs ranks 3,481 out of 21,273Before him are Goran Vlaović, Sulley Muntari, Serge Gnabry, Masayuki Maegawa, Ivo Radovniković, and Robert Mouynet. After him are Hilário, Kiyotaka Matsui, Daniel Agger, Hadi Dahane, Pál Várhidi, and Carlos Alberto Dias.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1959, Thomas Allofs ranks 302Before him are Rubén Paz, Bob Lazar, César Évora, Mahammed Dionne, Dylan Baker, and Roland Grapow. After him are Timoleón Jiménez, Jeanette Winterson, Rineke Dijkstra, Craig Armstrong, Tsitsi Dangarembga, and Anne Smith.

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In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Thomas Allofs ranks 4,859 out of 7,253Before him are Walter Behrendt (1914), Serge Gnabry (1995), Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert (1769), Edgar Reinhardt (1914), Roland Grapow (1959), and Olga Oelkers (1887). After him are Peter Scholl-Latour (1924), Adolf Möller (1877), Marika Kilius (1943), Carla Bodendorf (1953), Alfred Bohrmann (1904), and Gustav Schäfer (1906).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Germany

Among soccer players born in Germany, Thomas Allofs ranks 232Before him are Horst Wolter (1942), Erich Beer (1946), Günther Herrmann (1939), Manfred Kaiser (1929), Wolfgang Blochwitz (1941), and Serge Gnabry (1995). After him are Matthias Heidemann (1912), Thomas Linke (1969), Friedel Rausch (1940), Niclas Füllkrug (1993), Mario Basler (1968), and Heinz Vollmar (1936).