HANDBALL PLAYER

Ana Đokić

1979 - Today

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Ana Đokić (Serbian Cyrillic: Ана Ђокић; born 9 February 1979) is a former Serbian and Montenegrin handball player. She participated at the 2011 World Women's Handball Championship in Brazil. Đokić also competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics, where the Montenegrin team won the silver medal. She currently plays for ŽRK Vardar, in the Macedonian League and the EHF Cup. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ana Đokić is the 205th most popular handball player (up from 244th in 2019), the 503rd most popular biography from Serbia (up from 526th in 2019) and the 12th most popular Serbian Handball Player.

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Among HANDBALL PLAYERS

Among handball players, Ana Đokić ranks 205 out of 420Before her are Verónica Cuadrado, Albert Rocas, Mads Mensah Larsen, Anita Kulcsár, Anette Hoffmann, and Aron Pálmarsson. After her are Carmen Martín, Rodrigo Corrales, Vid Kavtičnik, Joan Cañellas, Vladimir Šujster, and Denis Krivoshlykov.

Most Popular Handball Players in Wikipedia

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Ana Đokić ranks 828Before her are Tomáš Zdechovský, Emraan Hashmi, Dmitriy Vassiliev, Olesya Forsheva, Sareh Bayat, and Atsuhiko Mori. After her are Nicolas Portal, Sandy Casar, Daniel Johns, Jesse Bradford, Ferydoon Zandi, and Jennifer Finnigan.

Others Born in 1979

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In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Ana Đokić ranks 503 out of 661Before her are Jelena Nikolić (1982), Ljubomir Fejsa (1988), Filip Krajinović (1992), Miomir Kecmanović (1999), Marjan Marković (1981), and Slobodan Soro (1978). After her are Vanja Udovičić (1982), Stefana Veljković (1990), Vladimir Lučić (1989), Andrea Lekić (1987), Miljan Mrdaković (1982), and Milan Jovanović (1983).

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS In Serbia

Among handball players born in Serbia, Ana Đokić ranks 12Before her are Momir Rnić (1955), Dragan Škrbić (1968), Bojana Popović (1979), Katarina Bulatović (1984), Momir Ilić (1981), and Bojana Radulović (1973). After her are Andrea Lekić (1987), Žarko Šešum (1986), and Marko Vujin (1984).