CYCLIST

Danilo Wyss

1985 - Today

Photo of Danilo Wyss

Icon of person Danilo Wyss

Danilo Wyss (born 26 August 1985) is a Swiss former road racing cyclist, who rode professionally between 2008 and 2020 for the BMC Racing Team and NTT Pro Cycling. He is no relation to fellow Swiss cyclist Daniel Wyss who won the Race Across America in 2006 and 2009. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Danilo Wyss is the 1,219th most popular cyclist (up from 1,266th in 2019), the 960th most popular biography from Switzerland (up from 968th in 2019) and the 41st most popular Swiss Cyclist.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Danilo Wyss by language

Loading...

Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Danilo Wyss ranks 1,219 out of 1,613Before him are Miguel Ángel Rubiano, Damien Monier, René Enders, Stefan Bissegger, Amber Neben, and Matthias Brändle. After him are Benoît Cosnefroy, Derek Gee, Petr Vakoč, Jens Debusschere, Tara Whitten, and Dmitriy Gruzdev.

Most Popular Cyclists in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1985, Danilo Wyss ranks 1,132Before him are Alexis Copello, Fabien Camus, Edwin Valencia, Tara Conner, Saeid Marouf, and Scott Michael Foster. After him are Tom De Sutter, Aleksandr Volkov, Eamon Sullivan, Osmay Acosta, Chaker Zouaghi, and Drissa Diakité.

Others Born in 1985

Go to all Rankings

In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Danilo Wyss ranks 960 out of 1,015Before him are Luca Aerni (1993), Daniel Yule (1993), Nassim Ben Khalifa (1992), Remo Forrer (2001), Stefan Bissegger (1998), and Laurence Rochat (1979). After him are Christian Schwegler (1984), Martina Schild (1981), Nevin Galmarini (1986), Giulia Steingruber (1994), Andi Zeqiri (1999), and Florijana Ismaili (1995).

Among CYCLISTS In Switzerland

Among cyclists born in Switzerland, Danilo Wyss ranks 41Before him are Michael Schär (1986), Rubens Bertogliati (1979), Christoph Sauser (1976), Johann Tschopp (1982), Steve Morabito (1983), and Stefan Bissegger (1998). After him are Martin Kohler (1985), Franco Marvulli (1978), Mauro Schmid (1999), Sébastien Reichenbach (1989), Mathias Flückiger (1988), and Simon Pellaud (1992).