CYCLIST

Julius Johansen

1999 - Today

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Julius Johansen (born 13 September 1999) is a Danish professional racing cyclist, who currently rides for UCI WorldTeam UAE Team Emirates XRG. He rode in the men's team pursuit event at the 2017 UCI Track Cycling World Championships and won gold at the 2017 UCI Road World Championships in the junior men's road race. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Julius Johansen is the 1,539th most popular cyclist (down from 1,480th in 2019), the 1,012th most popular biography from Denmark (down from 1,003rd in 2019) and the 58th most popular Danish Cyclist.

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Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Julius Johansen ranks 1,539 out of 1,613Before him are Ed Clancy, Mauri Vansevenant, Michal Schlegel, Lloyd Mondory, Lisa Klein, and Guillaume Bonnafond. After him are Tatsiana Sharakova, Soraya Paladin, Alexander Kamp, Arnold Jeannesson, Emma Norsgaard, and Evaldas Šiškevičius.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1999, Julius Johansen ranks 433Before him are Dan Ticktum, Haruka Kudō, Kerry Ingram, Laura Omloop, Federica Isola, and Pol Lozano. After him are Jang Min-hee, Camryn Rogers, Emma Norsgaard, Joel Asoro, Krystian Ochman, and Daniele Lavia.

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In Denmark

Among people born in Denmark, Julius Johansen ranks 1,012 out of 1,032Before him are Mathias Boe (1980), Jacob Barrett Laursen (1994), Lasse Vigen Christensen (1994), Jonas Gregaard (1996), Patrick Banggaard (1994), and Mads Glæsner (1988). After him are Nicklas Jensen (1993), Alexander Kamp (1993), Daniel Høegh (1991), Emma Norsgaard (1999), Nicolai Brock-Madsen (1993), and Nicolaj Thomsen (1993).

Among CYCLISTS In Denmark

Among cyclists born in Denmark, Julius Johansen ranks 58Before him are Casper Jørgensen (1985), Rasmus Quaade (1990), Rasmus Pedersen (1998), Mikkel Frølich Honoré (1997), Jesper Hansen (1990), and Jonas Gregaard (1996). After him are Alexander Kamp (1993), Emma Norsgaard (1999), Casper von Folsach (1993), Julie Leth (1992), Sebastian Fini Carstensen (1995), and Caroline Bohé (1999).