SOCCER PLAYER

Viktor Onopko

1969 - Today

Photo of Viktor Onopko

Icon of person Viktor Onopko

Viktor Savelyevich Onopko (Russian: Виктор Савельевич Онопко; born 14 October 1969) is a former Russian football defender. He is the assistant manager of both FC Rostov in the Russian Premier League and the Russia national team. As a player, Onopko held the record for most international appearances for the Russia national team until 2015. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Viktor Onopko is the 4,639th most popular soccer player (down from 4,336th in 2019), the 888th most popular biography from Ukraine (up from 892nd in 2019) and the 42nd most popular Ukrainian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Viktor Onopko by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Viktor Onopko ranks 4,639 out of 21,273Before him are Guido Alvarenga, Nikola Kalinić, Wout Weghorst, Miguel Jones, Florian Wirtz, and Donald-Olivier Sié. After him are Diego Alonso, Břetislav Dolejší, Tsuru Morimoto, José Antonio Roca, Erick Mombaerts, and Rubén de la Red.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1969, Viktor Onopko ranks 332Before him are Dolly Buster, Georgiy Gongadze, Pat Monahan, Kotaro Nakao, Jamie Walters, and Patrick Fiori. After him are Almir, David Bernhardt, Noah Baumbach, Paul Tergat, Cory Booker, and David Adeang.

Others Born in 1969

Go to all Rankings

In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Viktor Onopko ranks 888 out of 1,365Before him are Viktor Putyatin (1941), Nina Dumbadze (1919), Victoria Zdrok (1973), Artem Dovbyk (1997), Joseph Ruttenberg (1889), and Anatoli Polivoda (1947). After him are Vladislav Illich-Svitych (1934), Yury Onufriyenko (1961), Isaac Schwartz (1923), Juliusz Schauder (1899), Dmytro Firtash (1965), and John Kelly (null).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Ukraine

Among soccer players born in Ukraine, Viktor Onopko ranks 42Before him are Viktor Matviyenko (1948), Oleksandr Zinchenko (1996), Yuriy Nikiforov (1970), Yozhef Betsa (1929), Pavel Cebanu (1955), and Artem Dovbyk (1997). After him are Yevhen Konoplyanka (1989), Andriy Lunin (1999), Hennadiy Lytovchenko (1963), Sergei Pavlovich Baltacha (1958), Aleksandr Ponomarev (1918), and Dmytro Chygrynskiy (1986).