TENNIS PLAYER

Björn Phau

1979 - Today

Photo of Björn Phau

Icon of person Björn Phau

Björn Phau (born 4 October 1979) is a retired German tennis player. He achieved a career-high singles ranking of World No. 59 in June 2006. Career highlights include reaching five ATP tour semifinals (Tokyo in 2005, Casablanca in 2006, Beijing in 2008, Houston in 2009 and Zagreb in 2014) and finishing runner-up in doubles at Munich in 2006 (partnering Alexander Peya). Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Björn Phau is the 1,012th most popular tennis player (up from 1,031st in 2019), the 6,411th most popular biography from Germany (up from 6,505th in 2019) and the 42nd most popular German Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Björn Phau by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Björn Phau ranks 1,012 out of 1,569Before him are Kristof Vliegen, Rogier Wassen, Emma Navarro, Mahesh Bhupathi, Juan Sebastián Cabal, and Patty Fendick. After him are Marcos Giron, Alisa Kleybanova, Romina Oprandi, Corina Morariu, Viktorija Golubic, and Daniel Altmaier.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Björn Phau ranks 779Before him are Markus Larsson, Mary Elizabeth Ellis, Jamie Dwyer, Georgi Peev, Joseph Elanga, and Masato. After him are Anastasios Sidiropoulos, Kris Meeke, Igor Pavlov, Jan Marek, Leandro Vieira, and Eriko Arakawa.

Others Born in 1979

Go to all Rankings

In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Björn Phau ranks 6,414 out of 7,253Before him are Christian Träsch (1987), Tim Lobinger (1972), Ralf Bartels (1978), Ismail Jakobs (1999), Thomas Hoeren (1961), and Margareta Kozuch (1986). After him are Patrick Helmes (1984), Jordan Carver (1986), Davie Selke (1995), Daniel Altmaier (1998), Jörg Fiedler (1978), and Max Lemke (1895).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Germany

Among tennis players born in Germany, Björn Phau ranks 42Before him are Eva Pfaff (1961), Urszula Radwańska (1990), Michael Kohlmann (1974), Alexander Waske (1975), Philipp Petzschner (1984), and Barbara Rittner (1973). After him are Daniel Altmaier (1998), Annika Beck (1994), Michael Berrer (1980), Denis Gremelmayr (1981), Kristina Barrois (1981), and Kevin Krawietz (1992).