SOCCER PLAYER

Vladimir Maminov

1974 - Today

Photo of Vladimir Maminov

Icon of person Vladimir Maminov

Vladimir Aleksandrovich Maminov (Russian: Владимир Александрович Маминов; born 4 September 1974) is a Russian-born football manager and a former player who represented Uzbekistan internationally. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Vladimir Maminov is the 13,724th most popular soccer player (down from 13,156th in 2019), the 3,276th most popular biography from Russia (up from 3,287th in 2019) and the 167th most popular Russian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Vladimir Maminov by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Vladimir Maminov ranks 13,724 out of 21,273Before him are Nasser Al-Dawsari, Kohei Miyazaki, David Yelldell, Jorginho, Théo Bongonda, and Oleg Ivanov. After him are Franco Brienza, Firas Al-Buraikan, Quenten Martinus, Thomas Foket, Nicolò Rovella, and Alban Hoxha.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Vladimir Maminov ranks 989Before him are Masanobu Matsunami, Takahiro Okubo, Manuel Martínez Gutiérrez, Ravish Kumar, Michele Didoni, and Jill Craybas. After him are Mark Fish, Beckie Scott, Lucimar de Moura, Tisir Al-Antaif, Akira Konno, and Barbara Chiappini.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Vladimir Maminov ranks 3,276 out of 3,761Before him are Vladimir Tarasenko (1991), Maxim Vylegzhanin (1982), Patimat Abakarova (1994), Renal Ganeyev (1985), Maksim Opalev (1979), and Oleg Ivanov (1986). After him are Sebastian Bayer (1986), Albert Selimov (1986), Kate Grigorieva (1989), Yuliya Gavrilova (1989), Dmitri Sennikov (1976), and Yury Patrikeyev (1979).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Russia

Among soccer players born in Russia, Vladimir Maminov ranks 167Before him are Magomed Ozdoyev (1992), Kirill Nababkin (1986), Ruslan Pimenov (1981), Roman Adamov (1982), Vyacheslav Dayev (1972), and Oleg Ivanov (1986). After him are Dmitri Sennikov (1976), Viktor Fayzulin (1986), Sergey Ryzhikov (1980), Oleg Shatov (1990), Andrey Lunyov (1991), and Andrei Sergeyevich Semyonov (1989).