SOCCER PLAYER

Vladimir Dišljenković

1981 - Today

Photo of Vladimir Dišljenković

Icon of person Vladimir Dišljenković

Vladimir Dišljenković (Serbian Cyrillic: Владимир Дишљенковић, Ukrainian: Владімір Дішленкович; born July 2, 1981) is a Ukrainian-Serbian retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Vladimir Dišljenković is the 12,686th most popular soccer player (down from 11,369th in 2019), the 533rd most popular biography from Serbia (down from 520th in 2019) and the 182nd most popular Serbian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Vladimir Dišljenković by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Vladimir Dišljenković ranks 12,686 out of 21,273Before him are Iasmin Latovlevici, Jonathan Urretaviscaya, Matthias Lehmann, Thorstein Helstad, Dostonbek Tursunov, and Kazuya Yamamura. After him are Masakatsu Sawa, Takaya Kurokawa, Alejandro Alfaro, Ahmed Al-Bahri, Abubakari Yakubu, and Pablo Barrientos.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1981, Vladimir Dišljenković ranks 936Before him are Jaime Valdés, José Luis Villanueva, Jonas Armstrong, Hannah Spearritt, Zhang Jiewen, and Frank Turner. After him are Lovro Zovko, Takaya Kurokawa, Abubakari Yakubu, Hitomi Obara, Blagoy Georgiev, and Abdelkader Laïfaoui.

Others Born in 1981

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Vladimir Dišljenković ranks 533 out of 661Before him are Stefan Marković (1988), Vladimir Štimac (1987), Ilija Bozoljac (1985), Vanja Radovanović (1982), Luka Milivojević (1991), and Milan Gajić (1986). After him are Karolina Šprem (1984), Duško Pijetlović (1985), Denis Šefik (1976), Nikola Drinčić (1984), Stevan Jelovac (1989), and Miloš Bajalica (1981).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Serbia

Among soccer players born in Serbia, Vladimir Dišljenković ranks 182Before him are Lazar Marković (1994), Aleksandar Pešić (1992), Mijat Gaćinović (1995), Radosav Petrović (1989), Luka Milivojević (1991), and Milan Gajić (1986). After him are Nikola Drinčić (1984), Miloš Bajalica (1981), Nemanja Pejčinović (1987), Aleksandar Ignjovski (1991), Neško Milovanović (1974), and Uroš Matić (1990).