ATHLETE

Frédérique Matla

1996 - Today

Photo of Frédérique Matla

Icon of person Frédérique Matla

Frédérique Matla (born 28 December 1996) is a Dutch professional field hockey player. Matla was part of the Netherlands Junior National Team at the 2016 Junior World Cup where the team finished second, and also finished as top scorer for the tournament, with 12 goals. She was also part of the 2020 Tokyo and 2024 Paris women's field hockey Olympic champion team. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Frédérique Matla is the 7,158th most popular athlete (down from 6,184th in 2019), the 1,781st most popular biography from Netherlands (down from 1,665th in 2019) and the 151st most popular Dutch Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Frédérique Matla by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Frédérique Matla ranks 7,158 out of 6,025Before her are Polina Vedekhina, Andressa de Morais, Xénia Krizsán, Valeriy Pronkin, Fredrik Bjerrehuus, and Rusheen McDonald. After her are Caleb Ndiku, Wu Zhiqiang, Kokona Hiraki, Nadia Eke, Luca Rambaldi, and Zhang Ling.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1996, Frédérique Matla ranks 1,067Before her are Kazuma Takayama, Reece Prescod, Taro Sugimoto, Alexander Porter, Kohei Tezuka, and Austin North. After her are Ryan Lee, Felix Platte, Shoichiro Mukai, Marshall Munetsi, Ayomide Folorunso, and Kira Weidle-Winkelmann.

Others Born in 1996

Go to all Rankings

In Netherlands

Among people born in Netherlands, Frédérique Matla ranks 1,782 out of 1,646Before her are Arianne Hartono (1996), Abiba Abuzhakynova (1997), Diane van Es (1999), Pien Sanders (1998), Natalie La Rose (1988), and Ymkje Clevering (1995). After her are Tes Schouten (2000), Selena Piek (1991), Reshmie Oogink (1989), Esmee Visser (1996), Maria Verschoor (1994), and Victoria Pelova (1999).

Among ATHLETES In Netherlands

Among athletes born in Netherlands, Frédérique Matla ranks 151Before her are Felix Gross (null), Darius van Driel (1989), Marieke Keijser (1997), Diane van Es (1999), Pien Sanders (1998), and Ymkje Clevering (1995). After her are Reshmie Oogink (1989), Maria Verschoor (1994), Merel Smulders (1998), Pirmin Blaak (1988), Felice Albers (1999), and Marloes Keetels (1993).