Soccer Player

Ladislav Petráš

Slovak footballer

1946 - today

EN.WIKIPEDIA PAGE VIEWS (PV)

Photo of Ladislav Petráš

Icon of person Ladislav Petráš

His biography is available in 19 different languages on Wikipedia. Ladislav Petráš is the 1,964th most popular soccer player (down from 1,874th in 2024), the 143rd most popular biography from Slovakia (down from 135th in 2019) and the 21st most popular Slovak Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

9.2k

Page Views

Past 12 months

58.16

HPI

Historical Popularity Index

Page views of Ladislav Petráš by language

Loading...

Among Soccer Players

Among soccer players, Ladislav Petráš ranks 1,960 out of 21,273. Before him are Ján Kozák, Carlo Ceresoli, Max Abegglen, Zlatko Papec, Ashley Cole, and Roger Courtois. After him are Roger Lukaku, Mario Bertini, William Gallas, Ragnar Gustavsson, Naohiro Oyama, and Pierre Sinibaldi.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1946, Ladislav Petráš ranks 413. Before him are Valentina Tolkunova, Hayley Mills, Sher Bahadur Deuba, Sacheen Littlefeather, Hiroshi Fujioka, and Stephen McHattie. After him are Daniela Hodrová, George Robertson, Baron Robertson of Port Ellen, Pauline Nyiramasuhuko, Dadá Maravilha, Zülfü Livaneli, and Björn Granath.

Others Born in 1946

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Ladislav Petráš ranks 143 out of NaN. Before him are Vasiľ Biľak (1917), Peter Šťastný (1956), Eugen Suchoň (1908), Roland Jacobi (1893), Ignatz Kolisch (1837), and Ján Kozák (1954). After him are Hana Hegerová (1931), János Bihari (1764), Janko Matúška (1821), József Csermák (1932), Samo Chalupka (1812), and Alexander Moyzes (1906).

Among Soccer Players In Slovakia

Among soccer players born in Slovakia, Ladislav Petráš ranks 21. Before him are Václav Ježek (1923), Vladimír Weiss (1939), Jaroslav Pollák (1947), Marián Masný (1950), Vladimír Weiss (1964), and Ján Kozák (1954). After him are Ján Švehlík (1950), Jozef Móder (1947), Imrich Stacho (1931), Michal Vičan (1925), Ľubomír Luhový (1967), and Anton Malatinský (1920).

العربية中文NederlandsEnglishFrançaisDeutschMagyarItaliano日本語PolskiPortuguêsРусскийEspañol