ATHLETE

Fița Lovin

1951 - Today

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Fița Lovin (née Rafira on 14 January 1951) is a retired middle-distance runner from Romania. She competed at the 1980 and 1984 Olympics and won the bronze medal in 800 metres in 1984, behind compatriot Doina Melinte and America's Kim Gallagher. She also won the European 1,500 m indoor title in 1984 and a silver medal at the 1982 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, placing fourth in 1985. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Fița Lovin is the 2,113th most popular athlete (up from 2,319th in 2019), the 507th most popular biography from Romania (up from 552nd in 2019) and the 28th most popular Romanian Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Fița Lovin ranks 2,113 out of 6,025Before her are Angelo Scuri, Isabelle Daniels, Svetlana Krachevskaya, Kaisa Mäkäräinen, Norvel Lee, and Mervyn Wood. After her are Abdul Hamid, Hans Wetterström, Meredith Colket, Dorothy Shirley, Shinji Hosokawa, and Zdravko Hebel.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1951, Fița Lovin ranks 590Before her are Gerald Grosvenor, 6th Duke of Westminster, Abdelmajid Bourebbou, Edward Albert, Oscar Hijuelos, Māris Gailis, and Janusz Lewandowski. After her are Nobutaka Taguchi, Thomas Akers, Juan Carlos Oblitas, Terrence Mann, Steven Lisberger, and Barbara Cochran.

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In Romania

Among people born in Romania, Fița Lovin ranks 507 out of 844Before her are Chira Apostol (1960), Aglaja Veteranyi (1962), Vasile Chiroiu (1910), Cristi Puiu (1967), Iulian Filipescu (1974), and Alexandru Athanasiu (1955). After her are Ștefan Rusu (1956), Elena Horvat (1958), Costică Dafinoiu (1954), Gabriela Szabo (1975), Mihai Tudose (1967), and Cristina Elena Grigoraș (1966).

Among ATHLETES In Romania

Among athletes born in Romania, Fița Lovin ranks 28Before her are Anișoara Cușmir-Stanciu (1962), Paula Ivan (1963), Sofia Corban (1956), Ghiță Licu (1945), Sanda Toma (1956), and Chira Apostol (1960). After her are Elena Horvat (1958), Costică Dafinoiu (1954), Gabriela Szabo (1975), Dimitrie Popescu (1961), Maria Ștefan (1954), and Corneliu Ion (1951).