CYCLIST

María Luisa Calle

1968 - Today

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María Luisa Calle Williams (born October 3, 1968) is a Colombian professional racing cyclist. She was born in Medellín. In the 2004 Summer Olympics, she won a bronze medal in the cycling women's points race, the first Colombian to win a medal in cycling. She was initially stripped of the medal after a positive test result for the banned stimulant heptaminol. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 18 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 16 in 2024). María Luisa Calle is the 907th most popular cyclist (up from 949th in 2024), the 257th most popular biography from Colombia (up from 269th in 2019) and the 12th most popular Colombian Cyclist.

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Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, María Luisa Calle ranks 904 out of 1,613Before her are Christian Meyer, Tiesj Benoot, and Arnaud Démare. After her are Marcos Serrano, Michael Grenda, Grega Bole, Ramūnas Navardauskas, Graeme Brown, Steve Hegg, Adam Hansen, Michael Glöckner, and Daniele Bennati.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1968, María Luisa Calle ranks 968Before her are Mikhail Nestruyev, Sergei Martynov, Brennan Brown, Aleksandr Konovalov, Polly Higgins, and Birutė Šakickienė. After her are Lori Chavez-DeRemer, Keiichi Zaizen, Wang Huifeng, Julian Baggini, Koos Maasdijk, and Eric Viscaal.

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In Colombia

Among people born in Colombia, María Luisa Calle ranks 257 out of 356Before her are Emiliana Arango (2000), Víctor Hugo Peña (1974), Andrés Estrada (1967), Ciro Guerra (1981), Santiago Giraldo (1987), and Jefferson Lerma (1994). After her are Catalina Castaño (1979), Jhon Córdoba (1993), Nixon Perea (1973), James Angulo (1974), Fernando Gaviria (1994), and John Harold Lozano (1972).

Among CYCLISTS In Colombia

Among cyclists born in Colombia, María Luisa Calle ranks 12Before her are Rigoberto Urán (1987), Félix Cárdenas (1973), Miguel Ángel López (1994), Sergio Henao (1987), Mauricio Soler (1983), and Víctor Hugo Peña (1974). After her are Fernando Gaviria (1994), Daniel Felipe Martínez (1996), Leonardo Duque (1980), Carlos Betancur (1989), Mariana Pajón (1991), and José Serpa (1979).