CYCLIST

Carla Oberholzer

1987 - Today

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Carla Oberholzer (née van der Merwe; born 14 January 1987) is a South African professional racing cyclist, who most recently rode for UCI Women's Continental Team Bizkaia–Durango. She rode in the women's road race at the 2016 UCI Road World Championships. In June 2021, she qualified to represent South Africa at the 2020 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Carla Oberholzer is the 1,767th most popular cyclist (down from 1,763rd in 2019), the 479th most popular biography from South Africa (down from 477th in 2019) and the 17th most popular South African Cyclist.

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Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Carla Oberholzer ranks 1,767 out of 1,613Before her are Elisabeth Brandau, Holly Edmondston, Laura Stigger, Valerie Demey, Daniela Gaxiola, and Anton Sintsov. After her are Mina Sato, Leung Bo Yee, Pang Yao, Michelle Vorster, Shunsuke Imamura, and Jens Schuermans.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1987, Carla Oberholzer ranks 1,816Before her are Heather Bansley, Adama Ouedraogo, Andrew Charter, Daymaro Salina, Leonardo Terçariol, and Sarah Hawe. After her are Ching Siu Nga, Maciej Sarnacki, Danny Espinosa, Laura Graves, Juan Bar, and Julia Sude.

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In South Africa

Among people born in South Africa, Carla Oberholzer ranks 479 out of 454Before her are Jean van der Westhuyzen (1998), Werner Kok (1993), JP Duminy (1984), Emily Ford (1851), Luther Singh (1997), and Cecil Afrika (1988). After her are Stephen Mokoka (1985), Wenda Nel (null), Fagrie Lakay (1997), Daniel Ståhl (null), Katrina Werry (1993), and Candice Lill (1992).

Among CYCLISTS In South Africa

Among cyclists born in South Africa, Carla Oberholzer ranks 17Before her are Ryan Cox (1979), Burry Stander (1987), Ryan Gibbons (1994), Stefan de Bod (1996), Alan Hatherly (1996), and Nicholas Dlamini (1995). After her are Candice Lill (1992), Jean Spies (1989), and David Maree (1989).