TENNIS PLAYER

Anna Smashnova

1976 - Today

Photo of Anna Smashnova

Icon of person Anna Smashnova

Anna Aleksandrovna Smashnova (Hebrew: אנה סמשנובה, Russian: Анна Александровна Смашнова; born July 16, 1976) is a Soviet-born Israeli former tennis player. She retired from professional tour after Wimbledon 2007. Smashnova reached her career-high singles ranking of world No. 15 in 2003. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Anna Smashnova is the 760th most popular tennis player (up from 775th in 2019), the 227th most popular biography from Belarus (up from 238th in 2019) and the 6th most popular Belarusian Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Anna Smashnova by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Anna Smashnova ranks 760 out of 1,569Before her are Michael Venus, Nicole Melichar, Dianne Fromholtz, Byron Black, John Fitzgerald, and Oliver Marach. After her are Javier Frana, Barbara Jordan, André Sá, Karim Alami, Loïs Boisson, and Klára Koukalová.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1976, Anna Smashnova ranks 541Before her are Lena Park, Fabri Fibra, JC Chasez, Vic Darchinyan, Pavel Mareš, and Mohsen Namjoo. After her are Kaies Ghodhbane, Debbie Ferguson-McKenzie, Mariana Seoane, Tatsuhiko Kubo, Hitomi, and Maurren Maggi.

Others Born in 1976

Go to all Rankings

In Belarus

Among people born in Belarus, Anna Smashnova ranks 227 out of 368Before her are Siarhei Rutenka (1981), Valery Levaneuski (1963), Olga Govortsova (1988), Evgeny Agrest (1966), Vitali Kutuzov (1980), and Angelica Agurbash (1970). After her are Marina Lobatch (1970), Natalia Mishkutionok (1970), Aleksandr Kuschynski (1979), Oleg Novitsky (1971), Igor Lapshin (1963), and Sergei Gurenko (1972).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Belarus

Among tennis players born in Belarus, Anna Smashnova ranks 6Before her are Aryna Sabalenka (1998), Natasha Zvereva (1971), Victoria Azarenka (1989), Max Mirnyi (1977), and Olga Govortsova (1988). After her are Tatiana Poutchek (1979), Aliaksandra Sasnovich (1994), Vladimir Voltchkov (1978), Anastasiya Yakimova (1986), Ekaterina Dzehalevich (1986), and Ilya Ivashka (1994).