TENNIS PLAYER

Janette Husárová

1974 - Today

Photo of Janette Husárová

Icon of person Janette Husárová

Janette Husárová (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈɦusaːrɔʋaː]; born 4 June 1974) is a Slovak former tennis player. On 13 January 2003, she reached her best singles ranking of world No. 31. On 21 April 2003, she peaked at No. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Janette Husárová is the 531st most popular tennis player (down from 469th in 2019), the 256th most popular biography from Slovakia (down from 252nd in 2019) and the 7th most popular Slovak Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Janette Husárová by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Janette Husárová ranks 531 out of 1,569Before her are Guillermo Cañas, Samantha Stosur, Sabine Lisicki, Magnus Gustafsson, Jiří Novák, and Ben Shelton. After her are Philipp Kohlschreiber, Eddie Dibbs, Nicolás Almagro, Elena Vesnina, María José Martínez Sánchez, and Magdalena Maleeva.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Janette Husárová ranks 340Before her are Steve-O, Andrei Pavel, Eric Millegan, Takuya Ito, Armin Zöggeler, and Tomasz Frankowski. After her are Mark Hunt, Matthew Rhys, Marco Antonio Barrera, Omari Hardwick, Cristian Castro, and Renārs Kaupers.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Janette Husárová ranks 256 out of 418Before her are Marián Vajda (1965), Marek Čech (1983), Ján Svorada (1968), Miroslav Mentel (1962), Stanislav Šesták (1982), and Petra Vlhová (1995). After her are Radoslav Zabavník (1980), Stanislav Lobotka (1994), Miroslav Karhan (1976), Peter Pišťanek (1960), Jozef Sabovčík (1963), and Lukas Ridgeston (1974).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Slovakia

Among tennis players born in Slovakia, Janette Husárová ranks 7Before her are Martina Hingis (1980), Miloslav Mečíř (1964), Daniela Hantuchová (1983), Mirka Federer (1978), Dominika Cibulková (1989), and Marián Vajda (1965). After her are Jarmila Wolfe (1987), Karol Kučera (1974), Anna Karolína Schmiedlová (1994), Dominik Hrbatý (1978), Martin Kližan (1989), and Martina Suchá (1980).