ATHLETE

Bianca Silva

1998 - Today

Photo of Bianca Silva

Icon of person Bianca Silva

Bianca dos Santos Silva (born 22 July 1998) is a Brazilian rugby union and sevens player. She competed for Brazil in the 2025 Women's Rugby World Cup. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Bianca Silva is the 10,714th most popular athlete (down from 10,388th in 2019), the 2,534th most popular biography from Brazil (down from 2,420th in 2019) and the 159th most popular Brazilian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Bianca Silva by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Bianca Silva ranks 10,714 out of 6,025Before her are Meghan O'Leary, Nethra Kumanan, Subha Venkatesan, Kamola Irnazarova, Fatemeh Karamzadeh, and Jorik van Egdom. After her are Ali El-Sawy, Jacob Peters, Lena Mihailovic, Yevheniya Prokofyeva, Lena Micheel, and Alejandra Torres-Quevedo.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1998, Bianca Silva ranks 1,228Before her are Reeve Frosler, Griffin Colapinto, Colleen Furgeson, Lisa Höpink, Zhao Ruozhu, and Fatemeh Karamzadeh. After her are Lena Micheel, Kata Kondricz, Yehualeye Beletew, Dejah Mulipola, Martha Tembo, and Bubba Nickles.

Others Born in 1998

Go to all Rankings

In Brazil

Among people born in Brazil, Bianca Silva ranks 2,534 out of 2,236Before her are Rudolph Hackbarth (1994), Mariana Nicolau (1997), Liudmyla Kuklinovska (1998), Rafael Pereira (1997), Alexsandro Melo (1995), and Vagner Souta (1991). After her are Isadora Rodrigues Pacheco (2005), Caio Pumputis (1999), Jucielen Romeu (1996), Vinicius Lanza (1997), Rafaela Zanellato (1999), and Derick Silva (1998).

Among ATHLETES In Brazil

Among athletes born in Brazil, Bianca Silva ranks 159Before her are Thiago Moura (1995), Mariana Nicolau (1997), Liudmyla Kuklinovska (1998), Rafael Pereira (1997), Alexsandro Melo (1995), and Vagner Souta (1991). After her are Isadora Rodrigues Pacheco (2005), Jucielen Romeu (1996), Rafaela Zanellato (1999), Derick Silva (1998), Wanderley Pereira (2001), and Neama Said (2002).