HANDBALL PLAYER

Ana Radović

1986 - Today

Photo of Ana Radović

Icon of person Ana Radović

Ana Radović (Serbian Cyrillic: Ана Радовић; born 21 August 1986) is a former Montenegrin handballer. She played for the Montenegrin national team, where she won silver medals at the 2012 Olympics. She also participated at the 2011 World Women's Handball Championship in Brazil. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ana Radović is the 346th most popular handball player (up from 461st in 2019), the 338th most popular biography from Bosnia and Herzegovina (up from 378th in 2019) and the 17th most popular Bosnian, Herzegovinian Handball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Ana Radović by language

Loading...

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS

Among handball players, Ana Radović ranks 346 out of 420Before her are Albin Lagergren, Lasse Boesen, Maya Petrova, Amanda Kurtović, Emiliya Turey, and Tobias Karlsson. After her are Angela Malestein, Anna Sedoykina, Adrià Figueras, Krzysztof Lijewski, Macarena Aguilar, and Stine Skogrand.

Most Popular Handball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, Ana Radović ranks 1,141Before her are Miguel de las Cuevas, Dmitriy Gruzdev, Sergey Khodos, Babacar Gueye, Megan Park, and Jenna Marbles. After her are Becca Tobin, Kenji Suzuki, Aziz Ibragimov, Katie Taylor, Francisco Silva, and Kazuhito Esaki.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In Bosnia and Herzegovina

Among people born in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Ana Radović ranks 338 out of 375Before her are Jelena Blagojević (1988), Boris Pandža (1986), Ognjen Kuzmić (1990), Stanko Barać (1986), Saša Starović (1988), and Zoran Planinić (1982). After her are Matej Delač (1992), Mervana Jugić-Salkić (1980), Mateo Pavlović (1990), Bojan Tokić (1981), Nemanja Gordić (1988), and Marin Leovac (1988).

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS In Bosnia and Herzegovina

Among handball players born in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Ana Radović ranks 17Before her are Božidar Jović (1972), Mladen Bojinović (1977), Mirko Alilović (1985), Igor Karačić (1988), Vladimir Jelčić (1968), and Denis Buntić (1982).