SOCCER PLAYER

Tomislav Butina

1974 - Today

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Tomislav Butina (pronounced [tǒmislaʋ bǔtina]; born 30 March 1974) is a Croatian former professional footballer who played as goalkeeper for Dinamo Zagreb, Club Brugge and Olympiacos. He was also capped 28 times for the Croatia national team in the period from 2001 to 2006, and was member of Croatian squads at the 2002 and 2006 FIFA World Cups, as well as UEFA Euro 2004. Butina began his professional career with Dinamo Zagreb, debuting for the first team on 23 May 1993, when the club was known as "Croatia Zagreb". However, he struggled to make an impact at the club at the time when Dražen Ladić was the club's longtime first-choice goalkeeper. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 23 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 22 in 2024). Tomislav Butina is the 7,674th most popular soccer player (down from 6,964th in 2024), the 445th most popular biography from Croatia (down from 425th in 2019) and the 121st most popular Croatian Soccer Player.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Tomislav Butina ranks 472Before him are Mark Geiger, Chris Pontius, José Luís Peixoto, Sebastjan Cimirotič, Koji Murofushi, and Jason Mewes. After him are Darío Rodríguez, Luis Marín, Ovidiu Cernăuțeanu, Keren Ann, Takashi Hirano, and Madeleine Peyroux.

Others Born in 1974

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In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Tomislav Butina ranks 445 out of 700Before him are Dino Jelusić (1992), Željko Reiner (1953), Marko Pjaca (1995), Filip Šovagović (1966), Vlado Lisjak (1962), and Jurica Vranješ (1980). After him are Nikola Vlašić (1997), Snježana Kordić (1964), Miro Gavran (1961), Mislav Bezmalinović (1967), Tomo Šokota (1977), and Nenad Gračan (1962).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Croatia

Among soccer players born in Croatia, Tomislav Butina ranks 120Before him are Besart Abdurahimi (1990), Hrvoje Ćustić (1983), Gordon Schildenfeld (1985), Marko Pjaca (1995), and Jurica Vranješ (1980). After him are Nikola Vlašić (1997), Tomo Šokota (1977), Nenad Gračan (1962), Dejan Jakovic (1985), Davor Vugrinec (1975), Ivan Turina (1980), and Duje Ćaleta-Car (1996).