Soccer Player

Igor Smolnikov

Russian footballer

1988 - today

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His biography is available in 36 different languages on Wikipedia (down from 37 in 2024). Igor Smolnikov is the 12,170th most popular soccer player (down from 10,986th in 2024), the 3,293rd most popular biography from Russia (down from 3,120th in 2019) and the 157th most popular Russian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

24k

Page Views

Past 12 months

42.50

HPI

Historical Popularity Index

Data Insights

36

Igor Smolnikov's biography spans 36 Wikipedia language editions and earns a Historical Popularity Index of 42.50.

Page views of Igor Smolnikov by language

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Among Soccer Players

Among soccer players, Igor Smolnikov ranks 12,157 out of 24,321. Before him are Greg Taylor, Zakaria Labyad, Melanie Leupolz, Keiju Karashima, Felipe Félix, and Claudemir de Souza. After him are Júlio Sérgio, Nicklas Pedersen, Patrizia Panico, Dominic Calvert-Lewin, Horst Heldt, and Fabián Monzón.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1988, Igor Smolnikov ranks 637. Before him are Jacob deGrom, Robson Conceição, Marcos Freitas, Jukka Raitala, Michał Kubiak, and Claudemir de Souza. After him are Rosie MacLennan, Oleksandr Abramenko, Jovan Adepo, Hiroki Fujiharu, Jordan Burroughs, and Ceyda Ateş.

Others Born in 1988

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In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Igor Smolnikov ranks 3,293 out of 4,534. Before him are Evgeny Tomashevsky (1987), Sergei Mozyakin (1981), Murat Gassiev (1993), Lyubov Bruletova (1973), Denis Kolodin (1982), and Galina Kukleva (1972). After him are Svetlana Ivanova (1985), Anna Danilina (1995), Sergei Bulygin (1963), Pavel Brutt (1982), Alexander Motylev (1979), and Marina Cherkasova (1964).

Among Soccer Players In Russia

Among soccer players born in Russia, Igor Smolnikov ranks 157. Before him are Yuri Krasnozhan (1963), Denis Glushakov (1987), Ibragim Gasanbekov (1969), Andrei Solomatin (1975), Vladimir Granat (1987), and Denis Kolodin (1982). After him are Anton Miranchuk (1995), Pavel Mamayev (1988), Dmitri Khlestov (1971), Vladimir Bystrov (1984), Fedor Černych (1991), and Vladimir Tatarchuk (1966).

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