TENNIS PLAYER

Gisela Dulko

1985 - Today

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Gisela Dulko (Spanish pronunciation: [xiˈsela ˈðulko]; born 30 January 1985) is an Argentine former tennis player. Although she enjoyed modest success in singles, reaching a career-high ranking of world No. 26 and winning four WTA titles, her speciality was doubles, where she achieved the world No. 1 ranking and won 17 WTA titles. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Gisela Dulko is the 557th most popular tennis player (down from 519th in 2019), the 694th most popular biography from Argentina (up from 718th in 2019) and the 12th most popular Argentinean Tennis Player.

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Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Gisela Dulko ranks 557 out of 1,569Before her are Ai Sugiyama, Tim Henman, Kevin Ullyett, Cyril Suk, Camila Giorgi, and Marcos Baghdatis. After her are Martin Verkerk, Frances Tiafoe, Kristina Mladenovic, Dmitry Tursunov, Mark Woodforde, and Jarkko Nieminen.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1985, Gisela Dulko ranks 253Before her are Toshiki Chino, Michael Trevino, Sarah Butler, Danila Kozlovsky, Allyson Felix, and Marcos Baghdatis. After her are Curt Hawkins, Duško Tošić, Lee Keun-ho, Dai Okada, Marc Gasol, and Madeline Zima.

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In Argentina

Among people born in Argentina, Gisela Dulko ranks 694 out of 1,154Before her are Mariano Andújar (1983), María Eugenia Suárez (1992), Nicolás Gaitán (1988), Rubén Cano (1951), Óscar Ustari (1986), and Emi Buendía (1996). After her are Juan Diego Botto (1975), Thiago Almada (2001), Germán Pezzella (1991), Néstor Fabbri (1968), Gabriel Mercado (1987), and Clemente Rodríguez (1981).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Argentina

Among tennis players born in Argentina, Gisela Dulko ranks 12Before her are Guillermo Coria (1982), Mariano Puerta (1978), José Luis Clerc (1958), Patricia Tarabini (1968), Diego Schwartzman (1992), and Guillermo Cañas (1977). After her are Paola Suárez (1976), Francisco Cerúndolo (1998), Pablo Cuevas (1986), Horacio Zeballos (1985), José Acasuso (1982), and Martín Jaite (1964).