TENNIS PLAYER

Marlene Weingärtner

1980 - Today

Photo of Marlene Weingärtner

Icon of person Marlene Weingärtner

Marlene Weingärtner (born 30 January 1980) is a retired tennis player from Germany. She is a former top 40 player in both singles and doubles. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 15 different languages on Wikipedia. Marlene Weingärtner is the 1,344th most popular tennis player (down from 1,249th in 2024), the 7,006th most popular biography from Germany (down from 6,738th in 2019) and the 65th most popular German Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Marlene Weingärtner by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Marlene Weingärtner ranks 1,344 out of 1,569Before her are Kathy Rinaldi, Rebecca Peterson, Diego Junqueira, Marta Marrero, Elisabetta Cocciaretto, and Jovana Jakšić. After her are Danka Kovinić, Chang Kai-chen, Yuan Yue, Zuzana Kučová, Vitalia Diatchenko, and Johanna Konta.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1980, Marlene Weingärtner ranks 1,174Before her are Alex Hassell, Henriette Mikkelsen, Javier Baraja, Tonel, Franco Semioli, and Mats Larsson. After her are Ossi Väänänen, Danny O'Donoghue, Rastislav Staňa, Rikke Skov, Ryta Turava, and Iván Zarandona.

Others Born in 1980

Go to all Rankings

In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Marlene Weingärtner ranks 7,009 out of 7,253Before her are Danny Williams (1989), Markus Fothen (1981), Adil Chihi (1988), Mohamed Amsif (1989), Yannick Gerhardt (1994), and Benedict Wells (1984). After her are Mike Windischmann (1965), Andreas Müller (1979), Sandra Völker (1974), Mohamed Dräger (1996), Bastian Oczipka (1989), and Felix Loch (1989).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Germany

Among tennis players born in Germany, Marlene Weingärtner ranks 65Before her are Andreas Beck (1986), Peter Gojowczyk (1989), Dominik Koepfer (1994), Christopher Kas (1980), Tim Pütz (1987), and Sandra Klösel (1979). After her are Jens Knippschild (1975), Jule Niemeier (1999), Martin Emmrich (1984), Cedrik-Marcel Stebe (1990), Andreas Mies (1990), and Tamara Korpatsch (1995).