ATHLETE

Frederik Schou-Nielsen

1996 - Today

Photo of Frederik Schou-Nielsen

Icon of person Frederik Schou-Nielsen

Frederik Schou-Nielsen (born 5 February 1996) is a Danish athlete. He competed in the men's 4 × 100 metres relay event at the 2020 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Frederik Schou-Nielsen is the 10,090th most popular athlete (down from 9,851st in 2019), the 1,081st most popular biography from Denmark (down from 1,076th in 2019) and the 72nd most popular Danish Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Frederik Schou-Nielsen by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Frederik Schou-Nielsen ranks 10,090 out of 6,025Before him are Maria Grazia Alemanno, Marie Oteiza, Kimberly Lim, Doneisha Anderson, Zhang Jinrong, and Ayeisha McFerran. After him are Sabina Tashkenbaeva, Rebecca Allen, Onat Kazaklı, Owen Wright, Taravat Khaksar, and Mario Burke.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1996, Frederik Schou-Nielsen ranks 1,379Before him are Max Appel, Vittória Lopes, Kyra Condie, Kimberly Lim, Ayeisha McFerran, and Fanny Teijonsalo. After him are Dominique Parrish, Yul Moldauer, Itay Goldfaden, Špela Perše, Shura Kitata, and Vidar Johansson.

Others Born in 1996

Go to all Rankings

In Denmark

Among people born in Denmark, Frederik Schou-Nielsen ranks 1,081 out of 1,032Before him are Mette Graversgaard (1995), Frida Sanggaard Nielsen (1998), Nanna Koerstz Madsen (1994), Emily Kristine Pedersen (1996), Simone Christensen (1994), and Christina Johansen (1992). After him are Rasmus Højgaard (2001), Irene Chepet Cheptai (1992), Simon Keenan (1992), Alexander Nørgaard (2000), Shahar Tibi (1997), and Ida Jacobsen (1995).

Among ATHLETES In Denmark

Among athletes born in Denmark, Frederik Schou-Nielsen ranks 72Before him are Ole Hesselbjerg (null), Mette Graversgaard (1995), Frida Sanggaard Nielsen (1998), Nanna Koerstz Madsen (1994), Simone Christensen (1994), and Christina Johansen (1992). After him are Rasmus Højgaard (2001), Irene Chepet Cheptai (1992), Simon Keenan (1992), Shahar Tibi (1997), Ida Jacobsen (1995), and Lærke Buhl-Hansen (null).