CYCLIST

Lars Boom

1985 - Today

Photo of Lars Boom

Icon of person Lars Boom

Lars Anthonius Johannes Boom (born 30 December 1985) is a professional cyclo-cross and mountain bike racing cyclist from the Netherlands. He has also competed professionally in road racing, having raced between 2004 and 2019. Born in Vlijmen, Netherlands, Boom has also previously competed for Rabobank and their junior and continental teams over two spells with the team, as well as Astana. Boom won the cyclo-cross world championships in 2008. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Lars Boom is the 735th most popular cyclist (up from 741st in 2019), the 1,239th most popular biography from Netherlands (up from 1,279th in 2019) and the 45th most popular Dutch Cyclist.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Lars Boom by language

Loading...

Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Lars Boom ranks 735 out of 1,613Before him are Tanel Kangert, Sergi Escobar, Dmitry Nelyubin, Sébastien Hinault, Xabier Zandio, and Oliver Zaugg. After him are Chris Hoy, Toni Tauler, Theo Bos, Christophe Capelle, Olga Slyusareva, and Enric Mas.

Most Popular Cyclists in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1985, Lars Boom ranks 569Before him are Landry N'Guémo, David Navara, Patrick Makau Musyoki, Masafumi Yoshida, Bakaye Traoré, and Hamed Haddadi. After him are Krunoslav Simon, Oh Ha-na, Fred Gil, Georgios Printezis, Margaret Berger, and Robert Iler.

Others Born in 1985

Go to all Rankings

In Netherlands

Among people born in Netherlands, Lars Boom ranks 1,240 out of 1,646Before him are Kevin Diks (1996), Halbe Zijlstra (1969), Michiel Bartman (1967), Stefano Lilipaly (1990), Ranomi Kromowidjojo (1990), and Joram van Klaveren (1979). After him are Elisabeth Willeboordse (1978), Theo Bos (1983), Boyan Slat (1994), Leroy Fer (1990), Jürgen Locadia (1993), and Marit van Eupen (1969).

Among CYCLISTS In Netherlands

Among cyclists born in Netherlands, Lars Boom ranks 45Before him are Bart Brentjens (1968), Dylan van Baarle (1992), Steven de Jongh (1973), Léon van Bon (1972), Dylan Groenewegen (1993), and Wilco Kelderman (1991). After him are Theo Bos (1983), Fabio Jakobsen (1996), Lieuwe Westra (1982), Pieter Weening (1981), Maarten Tjallingii (1977), and Kirsten Wild (1982).