TENNIS PLAYER

Jan Hernych

1979 - Today

Photo of Jan Hernych

Icon of person Jan Hernych

Jan Hernych (born 7 July 1979) is a Czech former professional tennis player and tennis coach. Hernych turned professional in 1998 and achieved his career-high singles ranking of world No. 59 in April 2009. He won one doubles title on the ATP Tour and was runner-up in 's-Hertogenbosch in 2006. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jan Hernych is the 913th most popular tennis player (up from 940th in 2019), the 983rd most popular biography from Czechia (up from 1,010th in 2019) and the 50th most popular Czech Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Jan Hernych by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Jan Hernych ranks 913 out of 1,569Before him are Jeff Coetzee, Lori McNeil, Chanelle Scheepers, Sargis Sargsian, Dušan Vemić, and Arnaud Di Pasquale. After him are Alexandre Müller, Lukáš Dlouhý, Mandy Minella, Aslan Karatsev, João Sousa, and Luis Horna.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Jan Hernych ranks 666Before him are Anastasiya Kapachinskaya, Coco Austin, Cristian Mora, Arnaud Di Pasquale, Masashi Motoyama, and Norbert Hauata. After him are Pavel Volya, Lee Soo-young, Zlatan Bajramović, Jesse Carmichael, Tatiana Poutchek, and Fani Chalkia.

Others Born in 1979

Go to all Rankings

In Czechia

Among people born in Czechia, Jan Hernych ranks 983 out of 1,200Before him are Gabriela Koukalová (1989), Roman Červenka (1985), Petra Cetkovská (1985), Roman Týce (1977), Martin Procházka (1972), and Tomáš Plekanec (1982). After him are Lukáš Dlouhý (1983), Petr Gabriel (1973), Jakub Menšík (2005), Roman Hubník (1984), David Navara (1985), and Petra Němcová (1979).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Czechia

Among tennis players born in Czechia, Jan Hernych ranks 50Before him are David Rikl (1971), David Prinosil (1973), Kristýna Plíšková (1992), Milan Šrejber (1963), Jiří Lehečka (2001), and Petra Cetkovská (1985). After him are Lukáš Dlouhý (1983), Jakub Menšík (2005), Marie Bouzková (1998), Tomáš Macháč (2000), František Čermák (1976), and Jiří Vaněk (1978).