Soccer Player

Jean-Marc Ferreri

French association football player

1962 - today

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His biography is available in 26 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 25 in 2024). Jean-Marc Ferreri is the 4,183rd most popular soccer player (up from 5,118th in 2024), the 4,883rd most popular biography from France (up from 5,105th in 2019) and the 196th most popular French Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

29k

Page Views

Past 12 months

54.05

HPI

Historical Popularity Index

Data Insights

26

Jean-Marc Ferreri's biography spans 26 Wikipedia language editions and earns a Historical Popularity Index of 54.05.

Page views of Jean-Marc Ferreri by language

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Among Soccer Players

Among soccer players, Jean-Marc Ferreri ranks 4,178 out of 24,321. Before him are Ivica Brzić, Carlos Roa, Hugo Hovenkamp, Lazăr Sfera, Marcos Rojo, and Dani. After him are Bruce Arena, Agostino Di Bartolomei, Serhiy Skachenko, Ramón Calderé, Mario Haas, and Stephen Appiah.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1962, Jean-Marc Ferreri ranks 350. Before him are Laura San Giacomo, Vivian Campbell, Margherita Buy, Carlos Bernard, Alison Arngrim, and Charles Q. Brown Jr.. After him are Sophie Muller, Adel al-Jubeir, Mari Jungstedt, Elvira Lindo, Pavel Černý, and James Michael Tyler.

Others Born in 1962

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In France

Among people born in France, Jean-Marc Ferreri ranks 4,883 out of 7,658. Before him are Christine Pascal (1953), Laurent Lafforgue (1966), Claude Papi (1949), Raphaël Poirée (1974), Roschdy Zem (1965), and Michelle Perrot (1928). After him are Robert Siatka (1934), Philippe Boisse (1955), Louis Bach (1883), Jacques Cariou (1870), Émile Wegelin (1875), and Jérôme Le Banner (1972).

Among Soccer Players In France

Among soccer players born in France, Jean-Marc Ferreri ranks 196. Before him are Robert Défossé (1909), Randal Kolo Muani (1998), André Chorda (1938), Edmond Baraffe (1942), Jacques Mairesse (1905), and Claude Papi (1949). After him are Robert Siatka (1934), Louis Bach (1883), Gaston Peltier (1876), Johan Micoud (1973), Gérald Passi (1964), and Jacques Grimonpon (1925).

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