HANDBALL PLAYER

Katarina Bulatović

1984 - Today

Photo of Katarina Bulatović

Icon of person Katarina Bulatović

Katarina Bulatović (born 15 November 1984) is a retired Montenegrin handball player, that played the right back position. She was included in the European Handball Federation Hall of Fame in 2023. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Katarina Bulatović is the 115th most popular handball player (up from 135th in 2019), the 442nd most popular biography from Serbia (up from 451st in 2019) and the 9th most popular Serbian Handball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Katarina Bulatović by language

Loading...

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS

Among handball players, Katarina Bulatović ranks 115 out of 420Before her are Mia Hermansson-Högdahl, Raúl Entrerríos, Kang Jae-won, Alvaro Načinović, Filip Jícha, and Cristina Neagu. After her are Andreas Palicka, Venio Losert, Uroš Zorman, Linn-Kristin Riegelhuth Koren, Vincent Gérard, and Petar Metličić.

Most Popular Handball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1984, Katarina Bulatović ranks 419Before her are Maria Höfl-Riesch, Ahmed Fathy, Aristide Bancé, Kamil Kopúnek, Kenichi Nozawa, and Karim Haggui. After her are AB de Villiers, Igor Denisov, Sergey Stepanov, Didier Ya Konan, Alexander Geynrikh, and Belén Rodríguez.

Others Born in 1984

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Katarina Bulatović ranks 442 out of 661Before her are Dušan Lajović (1990), Zlatko Junuzović (1987), Boško Janković (1984), Nemanja Radonjić (1996), Nemanja Nikolić (1987), and Slobodan Rajković (1989). After her are Bojana Novakovic (1981), Dragan Tarlać (1973), Filip Đuričić (1992), Ivan Obradović (1988), Dirty South (1978), and Marko Kon (1972).

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS In Serbia

Among handball players born in Serbia, Katarina Bulatović ranks 9Before her are Branislav Pokrajac (1947), Arpad Sterbik (1979), Zlatko Portner (1962), Momir Rnić (1955), Dragan Škrbić (1968), and Bojana Popović (1979). After her are Momir Ilić (1981), Bojana Radulović (1973), Ana Đokić (1979), Andrea Lekić (1987), Žarko Šešum (1986), and Marko Vujin (1984).