Soccer Player

Keisuke Honda

Japanese footballer

1986 - today

EN.WIKIPEDIA PAGE VIEWS (PV)

Photo of Keisuke Honda

Icon of person Keisuke Honda

His biography is available in 73 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 72 in 2024). Keisuke Honda is the 1,467th most popular soccer player (down from 1,255th in 2024), the 970th most popular biography from Japan (down from 885th in 2019) and the 222nd most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

810k

Page Views

Past 12 months

59.76

HPI

Historical Popularity Index

Data Insights

73

Keisuke Honda's biography appears in 73 language editions of Wikipedia, more than 99% of all Soccer Players.

#222 / 4,248

Keisuke Honda ranks #222 of 4,248 Soccer Players born in Japan, inside the top 6% of that cohort.

Page views of Keisuke Honda by language

Loading...

Among Soccer Players

Among soccer players, Keisuke Honda ranks 1,464 out of 24,321. Before him are Ulf Kirsten, Matías Almeyda, José Sanfilippo, Horst Szymaniak, Joseíto, and Jacques Santini. After him are Robert Jonquet, René Houseman, Tommy Taylor, Armando Castellazzi, Conny Torstensson, and Colin McDonald.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, Keisuke Honda ranks 36. Before him are Fernando Muslera, Alex Turner, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, Cassie Ventura, Seth Rollins, and Oona Chaplin. After him are Jenna Coleman, Gaël Monfils, Alexandra Daddario, Kit Harington, Kasper Schmeichel, and Gabriel Boric.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Keisuke Honda ranks 970 out of 6,943. Before him are Oku Yasukata (1847), Kuniharu Nakamoto (1959), Haruomi Hosono (1947), Yukio Kasaya (1943), Shigeyoshi Inoue (1889), and Jien (1155). After him are Akio Toyoda (1956), Noriaki Kasai (1972), Yasutaka Tsutsui (1934), Takeshi Urata (1947), Giant Baba (1938), and Genichi Taguchi (1924).

Among Soccer Players In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Keisuke Honda ranks 222. Before him are Yasuhiko Okudera (1952), Mitsuo Watanabe (1953), Gyoji Matsumoto (1934), Kazuo Saito (1951), Shunsuke Nakamura (1978), and Kuniharu Nakamoto (1959). After him are Takashi Umezawa (1972), Shunichiro Okano (1931), Yoshinori Shigematsu (1930), Nobuko Jashima (1959), Shinobu Ikeda (1962), and Nobuyo Fujishiro (1960).

العربية中文NederlandsEnglishFrançaisDeutschMagyarItaliano日本語PolskiPortuguêsРусскийEspañol