SOCCER PLAYER

Mario Frick

1974 - Today

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Icon of person Mario Frick

Mario Frick (born 7 September 1974) is a Liechtensteiner retired professional footballer who is currently a manager for Luzern. He has earned 125 caps and scored a national record 16 goals for his country from his international debut in 1993 until his retirement in 2015. Mainly a striker, Frick was also deployed as a centre-back on occasion. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mario Frick is the 3,707th most popular soccer player (down from 3,250th in 2019), the 568th most popular biography from Switzerland (down from 537th in 2019) and the 40th most popular Swiss Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Mario Frick ranks 3,707 out of 21,273Before him are Alberto Mario González, José Bosingwa, Mikaël Silvestre, Bismarck Barreto Faria, Abdelkader Ben Bouali, and Toru Ojima. After him are Stefano Fiore, Nikola Kovachev, Jorge Romo, Egon Jönsson, Satoshi Tezuka, and Kily González.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Mario Frick ranks 166Before him are Steve Nash, Martin Henderson, Abubakar Shekau, Özgür Özel, Takahiro Sasaki, and Maxim Vengerov. After him are Kily González, Edgar Wright, Tobias Menzies, Nobuhisa Isono, Kathryn Hahn, and Adrian Ilie.

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In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Mario Frick ranks 568 out of 1,015Before him are Loris Kessel (1950), Ciriaco Sforza (1970), Vittore Gottardi (1941), Alain de Botton (1969), Gottfried Diener (1926), and Max Miedinger (1910). After him are Marc Rosset (1970), Bernard Challandes (1951), Richard Dürr (1938), Elizabeth Thompson (1846), Toni Branca (1916), and Jacques Chessex (1934).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Switzerland

Among soccer players born in Switzerland, Mario Frick ranks 40Before him are Frank Séchehaye (1907), Haris Seferović (1992), Pascal Zuberbühler (1971), Willy Kernen (1929), Ciriaco Sforza (1970), and Vittore Gottardi (1941). After him are Richard Dürr (1938), Lauro Amadò (1912), Ricardo Rodríguez (1992), Kurt Stettler (1932), Kubilay Türkyilmaz (1967), and Johann Vogel (1977).