SOCCER PLAYER

Pavel Kuka

1968 - Today

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Icon of person Pavel Kuka

Pavel Kuka (born 19 July 1968) is a Czech former professional footballer who played as a forward. He represented his national team on 87 occasions, scoring 29 goals. At club level Kuka started in 1987 with Rudá Hvězda Cheb in the Czechoslovak First League before transferring to Slavia Prague two years later. During the 1993–94 season he moved to Germany, where he played in the Bundesliga for 1. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Pavel Kuka is the 2,974th most popular soccer player, the 621st most popular biography from Czechia and the 55th most popular Czech Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Pavel Kuka ranks 2,974 out of 21,273Before him are Vitaly Daraselia, Casiano Chavarría, Andranik Eskandarian, Carlos Bacca, Adrian Ilie, and Eddy Pieters Graafland. After him are Eloy Campos, El Hadji Diouf, Ferenc Mészáros, Boro Primorac, Kim Jung-nam, and Kily González.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1968, Pavel Kuka ranks 198Before him are Manuel Rivera-Ortiz, Danny Nucci, Seth Gilliam, Hassan Ali Khayre, Gloria Trevi, and Vlade Divac. After him are Howard Donald, Mark Fisher, Bülent Korkmaz, Mariana Mazzucato, Sandrine Kiberlain, and Rachel Griffiths.

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In Czechia

Among people born in Czechia, Pavel Kuka ranks 621 out of 1,200Before him are Jan Černý (1874), Tomáš Galásek (1973), Zecharias Frankel (1801), Josef Václav Myslbek (1848), Hellmuth Karasek (1934), and Martin Frič (1902). After him are Jaromír Nohavica (1953), Zdeněk Mlynář (1930), Jan Kaplický (1937), Zdeněk Pecka (1954), Jan Kotěra (1871), and Adolf Born (1930).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Czechia

Among soccer players born in Czechia, Pavel Kuka ranks 55Before him are Karel Kolský (1914), František Šafránek (1931), Július Bielik (1962), Václav Mašek (1941), František Šterc (1912), and Tomáš Galásek (1973). After him are Václav Hovorka (1931), Josef Zeman (1915), Čestmír Vycpálek (1921), Milan Dvořák (1934), Karel Pešek (1895), and Miroslav Kadlec (1964).