ATHLETE

Deborah Schöneborn

1994 - Today

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Deborah Schöneborn (born 13 March 1994) is a German long-distance runner. She competed in the women's marathon at the 2020 Summer Olympics held in Tokyo, Japan, finishing as the second best German in the event in 18th place with a time of 2:33:08. She competed in the women's half marathon at the 2019 Summer Universiade held in Naples, Italy. She finished in 4th place. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Deborah Schöneborn is the 9,602nd most popular athlete (down from 9,220th in 2019), the 7,480th most popular biography from Germany (down from 7,471st in 2019) and the 717th most popular German Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Deborah Schöneborn ranks 9,602 out of 6,025Before her are Simon Child, Dane Sampson, Leigh Godfrey, Alena Furman, Nicolás Pacheco, and Ketiley Batista. After her are Shaun Gill, Tursunoy Rakhimova, Gatis Čakšs, Valerie Arioto, Josh Kerr, and Madeleine Wanamaker.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1994, Deborah Schöneborn ranks 1,628Before her are Klaudia Breś, Anjum Moudgil, Anna Van Bellinghen, Liang Meiyu, Marc Koch, and Nicolás Pacheco. After her are Anton Ipsen, Maike Diekmann, Khaled Ben Slimene, Tursynbay Kulakhmet, Magdiel Estrada, and Khurshidjon Tursunov.

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In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Deborah Schöneborn ranks 7,483 out of 7,253Before her are Mathilde Kramer (1993), Caterina Granz (1994), Mohamed Abdilaahi (1999), Marc Koch (1994), Katharina Trost (1995), and Carl Dohmann (1990). After her are Tursunoy Rakhimova (1997), Anton Ipsen (1994), Sonja Zimmermann (1999), André Sanita (1992), Jaden Eikermann (2005), and Isabella Straub (1991).

Among ATHLETES In Germany

Among athletes born in Germany, Deborah Schöneborn ranks 717Before her are Mathilde Kramer (1993), Caterina Granz (1994), Mohamed Abdilaahi (1999), Marc Koch (1994), Katharina Trost (1995), and Carl Dohmann (1990). After her are Tursunoy Rakhimova (1997), Sonja Zimmermann (1999), André Sanita (1992), Jaden Eikermann (2005), Isabella Straub (1991), and Manuel Sanders (1998).