TENNIS PLAYER

Karim Alami

1973 - Today

Photo of Karim Alami

Icon of person Karim Alami

Karim Alami (Arabic: كريم علمي) (born 24 May 1973) is a retired tennis player from Morocco, who turned professional in 1990. The right-hander won two career titles in singles, both in 1996 (Atlanta and Palermo), and reached a career-high ATP singles ranking of world No. 25, in February 2000. Alami reached the semifinals of the 2000 Monte Carlo Masters, defeating Magnus Norman and Albert Costa en route. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Karim Alami is the 764th most popular tennis player (down from 632nd in 2019), the 199th most popular biography from Morocco (down from 197th in 2019) and the 5th most popular Moroccan Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Karim Alami by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Karim Alami ranks 764 out of 1,569Before him are John Fitzgerald, Oliver Marach, Anna Smashnova, Javier Frana, Barbara Jordan, and André Sá. After him are Loïs Boisson, Klára Koukalová, Sania Mirza, Diego Pérez, Paul-Henri Mathieu, and Melinda Czink.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1973, Karim Alami ranks 599Before him are Ray Parlour, J. C. Chandor, Markus Näslund, Kohsuke Toriumi, Molly Sims, and Panjabi MC. After him are Chelsi Smith, Jo Pavey, Katrin Apel, Valdete Idrizi, Daniel Günther, and Stipe Drews.

Others Born in 1973

Go to all Rankings

In Morocco

Among people born in Morocco, Karim Alami ranks 199 out of 264Before him are Lahcen Abrami (1969), Mounir Fatmi (1970), Abdelhamid Sabiri (1996), Rashid Ramzi (1980), Badr El Kaddouri (1981), and Youssouf Hadji (1980). After him are Oussama Assaidi (1988), Abderrahim Ouakili (1970), Soufiane Rahimi (1996), French Montana (1984), Talal El Karkouri (1976), and Abdelilah Saber (1974).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Morocco

Among tennis players born in Morocco, Karim Alami ranks 5Before him are Guy Forget (1965), Younes El Aynaoui (1971), Ronald Agénor (1964), and Hicham Arazi (1973). After him are Arnaud Di Pasquale (1979).