ATHLETE

Kristaps Neretnieks

1989 - Today

Photo of Kristaps Neretnieks

Icon of person Kristaps Neretnieks

Kristaps Neretnieks (born 2 August 1989) is a Latvian show jumper. He represented Latvia at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo 2021, finishing 23rd in individual jumping. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Kristaps Neretnieks is the 8,742nd most popular athlete (up from 10,976th in 2019), the 338th most popular biography from Latvia (up from 345th in 2019) and the 50th most popular Latvian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Kristaps Neretnieks by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Kristaps Neretnieks ranks 8,742 out of 6,025Before him are Elena Micheli, Fanni Pigniczki, Eimear Lambe, Vittoria Fontana, Daniel Mateo, and Nasa Hataoka. After him are José Quintero, Roger Tahull, Virginia Díaz Rivas, Emma Plasschaert, Vít Přindiš, and Laura Galván.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1989, Kristaps Neretnieks ranks 1,794Before him are Angie Orjuela, Kemar Hyman, Ashley McKenzie, Franz Anton, Andrea Salvisberg, and Daniel Mateo. After him are Vít Přindiš, Mohamed Abdulredha, Lee Hui-sol, Robbie Hummel, Pablo Vainstein, and Juozas Bernotas.

Others Born in 1989

Go to all Rankings

In Latvia

Among people born in Latvia, Kristaps Neretnieks ranks 338 out of 323Before him are Camille Jedrzejewski (2002), Aleksejs Rumjancevs (1986), Arnis Rumbenieks (1988), Sanita Pušpure (1981), Agate Rašmane (1997), and Ritvars Suharevs (1999). After him are Līga Velvere (1990), Laura Igaune (1988), Gatis Čakšs (1995), Daniils Bobrovs (1997), Roberts Akmens (1996), and Artsiom Machekin (1991).

Among ATHLETES In Latvia

Among athletes born in Latvia, Kristaps Neretnieks ranks 50Before him are Camille Jedrzejewski (2002), Aleksejs Rumjancevs (1986), Arnis Rumbenieks (1988), Sanita Pušpure (1981), Agate Rašmane (1997), and Ritvars Suharevs (1999). After him are Līga Velvere (1990), Laura Igaune (1988), Gatis Čakšs (1995), Roberts Akmens (1996), Polina Fouda (2003), and Rodrigo Marte (1997).