POLITICIAN

Martin Hanzal

1987 - Today

Photo of Martin Hanzal

Icon of person Martin Hanzal

Martin Hanzal (Czech pronunciation: [ˈmarcɪn ˈɦanzal]; born 20 February 1987) is a Czech former professional ice hockey centre. He was drafted by the Phoenix Coyotes in the first round, 17th overall, of the 2005 NHL entry draft. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Martin Hanzal is the 19,518th most popular politician (down from 19,404th in 2019), the 1,187th most popular biography from Czechia and the 159th most popular Czech Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Martin Hanzal by language

Loading...

Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Martin Hanzal ranks 19,518 out of 19,576Before him are Anthony Foxx, Adam Price, Michael Smith, Mac Thornberry, Anna Hasselborg, and Biplab Kumar Deb. After him are Neisi Dajomes, Rahman Amouzad, Mashrafe Mortaza, Stephen Crabb, Arina Averina, and Joe Heck.

Most Popular Politicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1987, Martin Hanzal ranks 1,409Before him are Emmanuel Ekpo, Ian Goodfellow, Anžej Dežan, Jasmin Burić, Anastasiya Verameyenka, and Rodrigo Paraná. After him are Shoki Hirai, Bálint Korpási, Abdallah Deeb, Jerrod Carmichael, Ricardo Aparecido Tavares, and Jeremy Brockie.

Others Born in 1987

Go to all Rankings

In Czechia

Among people born in Czechia, Martin Hanzal ranks 1,187 out of 1,200Before him are Michal Kempný (1990), Jiří Sekáč (1992), Kateřina Baďurová (1982), Vítězslav Jaroš (2001), Aleš Matějů (1996), and Radim Řezník (1989). After him are Ondřej Cink (1990), Dominik Kubalík (1995), Antonín Kinský (2003), Martin Fuksa (1993), Sára Bejlek (2006), and Aleš Mandous (1992).

Among POLITICIANS In Czechia

Among politicians born in Czechia, Martin Hanzal ranks 159Before him are Radko Gudas (1990), Ivan Bartoš (1980), Jakub Kovář (1988), Ondřej Palát (1991), Tomáš Fleischmann (1984), and Michal Kempný (1990). After him are Tomáš Hertl (1993), Michal Čupr (1991), Petr Mrázek (1992), Jan Kudlička (1988), Michael Špaček (1997), and Radek Faksa (1994).