Soccer Player

Adrian Popescu

Romanian footballer

1960 - today

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His biography is available in 15 different languages on Wikipedia. Adrian Popescu is the 8,091st most popular soccer player (down from 7,635th in 2024), the 624th most popular biography from Romania (down from 592nd in 2019) and the 112th most popular Romanian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

4.5k

Page Views

Past 12 months

47.64

HPI

Historical Popularity Index

Data Insights

15

Adrian Popescu's biography spans 15 Wikipedia language editions and earns a Historical Popularity Index of 47.64.

Page views of Adrian Popescu by language

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Among Soccer Players

Among soccer players, Adrian Popescu ranks 8,085 out of 24,321. Before him are Christoph Spycher, Andy Lonergan, Nádson Rodrigues de Souza, Saki Kumagai, Francis Coquelin, and Jari Rantanen. After him are Kanako Ito, Julio Hernán Rossi, Emil Audero, Tatsuya Murao, Carlos Humberto Paredes, and Bruno Sarpa Costa.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1960, Adrian Popescu ranks 784. Before him are Michael Rispoli, Péter Disztl, Patrice Garande, Romy Saalfeld, Vivian Kubrick, and Emmanuel Félémou. After him are Mohanlal, Grant Morrison, Deborah Ellis, Paulo Rodrigues Barc, Delphine Djiraibe, and Kevin Doyle.

Others Born in 1960

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In Romania

Among people born in Romania, Adrian Popescu ranks 624 out of 1,050. Before him are Monica Niculescu (1987), Costel Pantilimon (1987), Ionel Ganea (1973), Mirel Rădoi (1981), Elina Löwensohn (1966), and Sándor Schwartz (1909). After him are Vlad Chiricheș (1989), Simona Păucă (1969), Nastasia Ionescu (1954), Gabriel Tamaș (1983), Veronica Cochela (1965), and Petre Becheru (1960).

Among Soccer Players In Romania

Among soccer players born in Romania, Adrian Popescu ranks 112. Before him are Bogdan Stancu (1987), Ovidiu Stîngă (1972), Radu Drăgușin (2002), Costel Pantilimon (1987), Mirel Rădoi (1981), and Sándor Schwartz (1909). After him are Vlad Chiricheș (1989), Gabriel Tamaș (1983), Daniel Timofte (1967), Anton Doboș (1965), Emil Săndoi (1965), and Cristian Săpunaru (1984).

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