RUGBY PLAYER

Carla Neisen

1996 - Today

Photo of Carla Neisen

Icon of person Carla Neisen

Carla Neisen (born 8 March 1996) is a French rugby player who plays as a center for the Blagnac women's rugby club and for the France women's national rugby union team since 2012. Neisen competed at the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics, where the team won a silver medal. She also played at the 2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens and won a bronze medal. She represented France at the 2024 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Carla Neisen is the 66th most popular rugby player (down from 58th in 2019), the 6,940th most popular biography from France (down from 6,936th in 2019) and the 10th most popular French Rugby Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Carla Neisen by language

Loading...

Among RUGBY PLAYERS

Among rugby players, Carla Neisen ranks 66 out of 35Before her are Caroline Drouin, Alena Tiron, Jiuta Wainiqolo, Carlin Isles, Werner Kok, and Lote Tuqiri. After her are Asaeli Tuivuaka, Ollie Lindsay-Hague, Sharni Williams, Vilimoni Botitu, Rusila Nagasau, and Aminiasi Tuimaba.

Most Popular Rugby Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1996, Carla Neisen ranks 1,222Before her are Sarah Bacon, Haramara Gaitán, Tim Ole Naske, Nathan Hales, Kayla Miracle, and Annette Echikunwoke. After her are Lizbeth Salazar, João Gabriel, Karl Bebendorf, Ali Khalafalla, Réka Gyurátz, and Grace Reid.

Others Born in 1996

Go to all Rankings

In France

Among people born in France, Carla Neisen ranks 6,940 out of 6,770Before her are Pauline Ado (1991), Aisha Gurbanli (1993), Valentin Belaud (1992), Manuel Cornu (1993), Rouguy Diallo (1995), and Laura Valette (1997). After her are Cui Qiuxia (1990), Kevin Peponnet (1991), Zhu Mingye (1992), Hélène Lefebvre (1991), Brigitte Ntiamoah (null), and Rira Suzuki (1998).

Among RUGBY PLAYERS In France

Among rugby players born in France, Carla Neisen ranks 10Before her are Léon Binoche (1878), Fanny Horta (1986), Lina Guérin (1991), Coralie Bertrand (1994), Camille Grassineau (1990), and Caroline Drouin (1996).