New games! PlayTrivia andBirthle.

COACH

Erik Hamrén

1957 - Today

Photo of Erik Hamrén

Icon of person Erik Hamrén

Erik Anders Hamrén (born 27 June 1957) is a Swedish manager and former football player, who most recently was the manager of Danish Superliga club AaB. Read more on Wikipedia

Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Erik Hamrén has received more than 199,533 page views. His biography is available in 27 different languages on Wikipedia. Erik Hamrén is the 211th most popular coach (down from 158th in 2019), the 783rd most popular biography from Sweden (down from 540th in 2019) and the 4th most popular Swedish Coach.

Memorability Metrics

  • 200k

    Page Views (PV)

  • 45.11

    Historical Popularity Index (HPI)

  • 27

    Languages Editions (L)

  • 4.40

    Effective Languages (L*)

  • 2.86

    Coefficient of Variation (CV)

Page views of Erik Hamréns by language


Among COACHES

Among coaches, Erik Hamrén ranks 211 out of 328Before him are Ezio Pascutti, Cosmin Olăroiu, Volodymyr Bezsonov, Edson Tavares, Ricardinho, and Juan Ramón López Caro. After him are Bob Bradley, Yoo Sang-chul, Delio Rossi, Jan Zwartkruis, Domenico Tedesco, and Sef Vergoossen.

Most Popular Coaches in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1957, Erik Hamrén ranks 289Before him are Thierry Meyssan, Walter Schachner, Kenyu Horiuchi, Peter Englund, Vladimir Kiselyov, and Simon Donaldson. After him are Florence Arthaud, Andrei Bukin, Rui Rio, Chico Serra, Ho Iat-seng, and Daniela Dessì.

Others Born in 1957

Go to all Rankings

In Sweden

Among people born in Sweden, Erik Hamrén ranks 783 out of 1,612Before him are Eagle-Eye Cherry (1968), Åge Lundström (1890), Ruben Östlund (1974), William Grut (1914), Erik Almlöf (1891), and Anders Svensson (1976). After him are Gunnar Setterwall (1881), Birger Sörvik (1879), Gösta Dunker (1905), Tomas Alfredson (1965), Max Tegmark (1967), and Gunder Bengtsson (1946).

Among COACHES In Sweden

Among coaches born in Sweden, Erik Hamrén ranks 4Before him are Sven-Göran Eriksson (1948), Lars Lagerbäck (1948), and Tommy Svensson (1945). After him are Roland Nilsson (1963).