SOCCER PLAYER

Vitali Rodionov

1983 - Today

Photo of Vitali Rodionov

Icon of person Vitali Rodionov

Vital Viktaravich Radzivonaw (Belarusian: Віталь Віктаравіч Радзівонаў; Russian: Виталий Родионов; born 11 December 1983) is a Belarusian former professional footballer who played as a forward. He spent most of his career with BATE Borisov. After retirement, he stayed with BATE as the team's sporting director. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 22 different languages on Wikipedia. Vitali Rodionov is the 14,878th most popular soccer player (down from 13,946th in 2024), the 318th most popular biography from Belarus (down from 302nd in 2019) and the 17th most popular Belarusian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Vitali Rodionov by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Vitali Rodionov ranks 14,878 out of 21,273Before him are Yu Genwei, Pablo Rosario, Tomoyoshi Ono, José Pedro Fuenzalida, Yutaro Abe, and Koichi Kidera. After him are Johannes Geis, Paolo Hurtado, Paulo Pezzolano, Juninho, Fran Beltrán, and Ali Abdi.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Vitali Rodionov ranks 1,099Before him are Abraão Lincoln Martins, Josefine Öqvist, Yassin Mikari, Reeve Carney, Slobodan Nikić, and Michael Cassidy. After him are Paulo Pezzolano, Antonio Porta, Tigran Vardan Martirosyan, Fininho, Carmelo González, and Yuya Hikichi.

Others Born in 1983

Go to all Rankings

In Belarus

Among people born in Belarus, Vitali Rodionov ranks 318 out of 368Before him are Ryta Turava (1980), Maryna Linchuk (1987), Ilona Usovich (1982), Ksenija Balta (1986), Alyaksandr Martynovich (1987), and Uzari (1991). After him are Aliaksei Abalmasau (1980), Andrei Aramnau (1988), Polina Smolova (1980), Yang Jian (null), Darya Chultsova (1997), and Mikhail Siamionau (1984).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Belarus

Among soccer players born in Belarus, Vitali Rodionov ranks 17Before him are Maksim Tsyhalka (1983), Sergey Krivets (1986), Vyacheslav Hleb (1983), Sergei Kornilenko (1983), Anton Putsila (1987), and Alyaksandr Martynovich (1987). After him are Yuri Zhevnov (1981), Syarhey Kislyak (1987), Ilya Shkurin (1999), Egor Filipenko (1988), Timofei Kalachev (1981), and Stanislaw Drahun (1988).