SOCCER PLAYER

Boško Šutalo

2000 - Today

Photo of Boško Šutalo

Icon of person Boško Šutalo

Boško Šutalo (Croatian pronunciation: [bôʃko ʃǔːtalo]; born 1 January 2000) is a Croatian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Polish Ekstraklasa club Cracovia, on loan from Belgian club Standard Liège. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 15 different languages on Wikipedia. Boško Šutalo is the 18,282nd most popular soccer player (down from 15,382nd in 2024), the 724th most popular biography from Croatia (down from 644th in 2019) and the 226th most popular Croatian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Boško Šutalo by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Boško Šutalo ranks 18,282 out of 21,273Before him are Leonie Maier, Kyoga Nakamura, Bamba Dieng, Saša Papac, Hussain Ali Baba, and Kaspars Dubra. After him are Amanda Nildén, Hideki Ishige, Hisashi Ohashi, Lalaïna Nomenjanahary, Lennart Thy, and Filippa Angeldahl.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 2000, Boško Šutalo ranks 363Before him are Hina Hayata, Larissa Manoela, Rana Dajani, Hannah Hampton, Christian Früchtl, and Bamba Dieng. After him are Tyrese Maxey, Ilan Van Wilder, Nino Žugelj, Markella Kavenagh, Matt O'Riley, and Matsuri Hino.

Others Born in 2000

Go to all Rankings

In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Boško Šutalo ranks 724 out of 700Before him are Ivan Močinić (1993), Josip Vrlić (1986), Andro Bušlje (1986), Željko Šakić (1988), Petar Muslim (1988), and Tomislav Smoljanović (1977). After him are Domagoj Bradarić (1999), Igor Bubnjić (1992), Josip Elez (1994), Nenad Žugaj (1983), Matej Jonjić (1991), and Miro Bilan (1989).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Croatia

Among soccer players born in Croatia, Boško Šutalo ranks 226Before him are Mario Maloča (1989), Matej Mitrović (1993), Drago Gabrić (1986), Aleksandar Čavrić (1994), Damir Kreilach (1989), and Ivan Močinić (1993). After him are Domagoj Bradarić (1999), Igor Bubnjić (1992), Josip Elez (1994), Matej Jonjić (1991), Nediljko Labrović (1999), and Karlo Letica (1997).