Ukraine national under-20 football team
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Ukraine national under-20 football team
Summary
Ukraine national under-20 football team is a national association football team[1]. It draws 35 Wikipedia views per month (national_association_football_team category, ranking #73 of 559).[2]
Key Facts
- Ukraine national under-20 football team is in the country of Ukraine[3].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's instance of is recorded as national association football team[4].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's flag image is recorded as Flag of Ukraine.svg[5].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's owned by is recorded as Ukrainian Association of Football[6].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's logo image is recorded as Logo Fédération Ukraine Football 2016.svg[7].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's head coach is recorded as Oleksandr Petrakov[8].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's sport is recorded as association football[9].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's country for sport is recorded as Ukraine[10].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'be-tarask', 'text': 'Украіна (да 20)'}[11].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's competition class is recorded as men's U20 association football[12].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/121ffhv6[13].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's FIFA country code is recorded as UKR[14].
- Ukraine national under-20 football team's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Ukraine[15].
Body
Identity
Ukraine national under-20 football team's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'be-tarask', 'text': 'Украіна (да 20)'}[11].
Ownership
Ukraine national under-20 football team's owned by is recorded as Ukrainian Association of Football[6].
Why It Matters
Ukraine national under-20 football team draws 35 Wikipedia views per month (national_association_football_team category, ranking #73 of 559).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[16] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[17]