HANDBALL PLAYER

Davor Dominiković

1978 - Today

Photo of Davor Dominiković

Icon of person Davor Dominiković

Davor Dominiković (born 7 April 1978) is a Croatian former professional handball player, who is the current handball coach for the Croatia national under-21 team & TuS Vinnhorst. He also competed for the Croatia national team at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 22 different languages on Wikipedia. Davor Dominiković is the 156th most popular handball player (up from 158th in 2024), the 519th most popular biography from Croatia (down from 493rd in 2019) and the 14th most popular Croatian Handball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Davor Dominiković by language

Loading...

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS

Among handball players, Davor Dominiković ranks 155 out of 420Before him are José Javier Hombrados, Mladen Bojinović, Gonzalo Pérez de Vargas, Isabelle Haak, and Natalya Morskova. After him are Bruno Gudelj, Ivan Čupić, Mirko Alilović, Valery Gopin, Kari Mette Johansen, Daouda Karaboué, and Jovanka Radičević.

Most Popular Handball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1978, Davor Dominiković ranks 680Before him are Christophe Rochus, Takanori Gomi, Ashton Holmes, Marek Saganowski, Takao Yamauchi, and Kieron Dyer. After him are Karine Ruby, Charly Wegelius, Fernando Rapallini, Maria Menounos, Frédéric Piquionne, and Ekaterina Schulmann.

Others Born in 1978

Go to all Rankings

In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Davor Dominiković ranks 516 out of 700Before him are Vladimir Arsenijević (1965), Lovro Majer (1998), and Dušan Vemić (1976). After him are Dragan Travica (1986), Mate Bilić (1980), Miro Kovač (1968), Bruno Gudelj (1966), Vladimir Miholjević (1974), Ivan Čupić (1986), Žana Lelas (1970), Petar Krpan (1974), and Josip Zovko (1970).

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS In Croatia

Among handball players born in Croatia, Davor Dominiković ranks 14Before him are Boris Jarak (1963), Alvaro Načinović (1966), Petar Metličić (1976), Valter Matošević (1970), Blaženko Lacković (1980), and Nenad Kljaić (1966). After him are Bruno Gudelj (1966), Ivan Čupić (1986), Valner Franković (1968), Manuel Štrlek (1988), Marko Kopljar (1986), and Vladimir Šujster (1972).