Vitali Kutuzov is a professional football/soccer player who played Forward (association football). Kutuzov was born on March 20, 1980, in Pinsk, Soviet Union. This article examines Vitali Kutuzov’s net worth.
As a youth, Vitali Kutuzov played for FC RUOR Minsk during 1995-1997. Over 1996-1997, Kutuzov played for FC RUOR Minsk earning 52 caps and scoring 29 goals. During 1998-2001, Kutuzov played for FC BATE Borisov earning 99 caps and scoring 55 goals. In 2001-2004, Kutuzov played for A.C. Milan earning 2 caps and scoring 0 goals. In 2002-2003, Kutuzov played for Sporting Clube de Portugal (loan) earning 23 caps and scoring 3 goals. From 2003-2004, Kutuzov played for U.S. Avellino 1912 (loan) earning 42 caps and scoring 15 goals. From 2004-2006, Kutuzov played for U.C. Sampdoria earning 20 caps and scoring 0 goals. From 2007-2008, Kutuzov played for Pisa Calcio (loan) earning 37 caps and scoring 10 goals.
Vitali Kutuzov also played nationally. During 1998-2001, Kutuzov played for the Belarus national under-21 football team scoring 9 goals, with 24 caps. During 2002-2011, Kutuzov played for the Belarus national football team with 53 caps and 13 goals.
Professional soccer/football players can take home plenty of money. But compensations depend on plenty of different circumstances. These include the player’s location and of course, their ranking. At the hightest level, players in the U.K. and Europe can earn $50 million or more. In the Americas, top players make $1,000,000-$2,000,000 per year while in countries where soccer/football is not as popular, like the US and China, players make a few hundred thousand per year. The worst paying leagues can pay under $50,000 per year.
So what is football/soccer player Vitali Kutuzov’s net worth in 2018? Our estimate for Vitali Kutuzov’s net worth as of 2018 is: $6 million
Here are some related football/soccer players: Sebastián Blanco, Santiago Villafañe, Mehdi Lacen, Gary Coulibaly, Domagoj Vida, Florin Cernat, Hal Robson-Kanu, Gevorg Kasparov, Jeff Smith, Christian Fernández, and John Oster.