ATHLETE

Martina Halinárová

1973 - Today

Photo of Martina Halinárová

Icon of person Martina Halinárová

Martina Halinárová, née Jašicová, also known as Schwarzbacherová from her first marriage, (born 22 April 1973 in Dolný Kubín) is a Slovak biathlete. She won a silver medal at the 1999 Biathlon World Championships. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 16 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 15 in 2024). Martina Halinárová is the 4,385th most popular athlete (up from 4,583rd in 2024), the 372nd most popular biography from Slovakia (up from 374th in 2019) and the 24th most popular Slovak Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Martina Halinárová by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Martina Halinárová ranks 4,385 out of 6,025Before her are Han Xu, Daniel Ståhl, Michela Ponza, Laura Sánchez, Raelene Boyle, and Kyle Hamilton. After her are Pamela Jelimo, Ken Wallace, Denia Caballero, Irina Khudoroshkina, Isaac Makwala, and Andy Turner.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1973, Martina Halinárová ranks 1,043Before her are Michael Blaudzun, Samir Barać, Mickaël Pagis, Kazuya Matsuda, Miroslav Berić, and Bartolo Colón. After her are Osamu Umeyama, Pete Parada, Mathias Fredriksson, Daniel Ballart, Frank Vogel, and Marc Schneider.

Others Born in 1973

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Martina Halinárová ranks 372 out of 418Before her are Kamil Mikulčík (1977), Jozef Krnáč (1977), Lukáš Lacko (1987), Jaroslav Obšut (1976), Henrieta Nagyová (1978), and Paulína Fialková (1992). After her are Max Jason Mai (1988), Michal Mertiňák (1979), Alexandra Borbély (1986), Andrej Karpathy (1986), Stanislav Varga (1972), and Viktória Kužmová (1998).

Among ATHLETES In Slovakia

Among athletes born in Slovakia, Martina Halinárová ranks 24Before her are Slavomír Kňazovický (1969), Zuzana Rehák-Štefečeková (1984), Libor Charfreitag (1977), Juraj Minčík (1977), Jozef Krnáč (1977), and Paulína Fialková (1992). After her are Peter Škantár (1982), Michal Riszdorfer (1977), Juraj Tarr (1979), Rastislav Staňa (1980), Erik Vlček (1981), and Martina Hrašnová (1983).