TENNIS PLAYER

Martina Suchá

1980 - Today

Photo of Martina Suchá

Icon of person Martina Suchá

Martina Suchá (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈsuxaː]; born 20 November 1980) is a former professional tennis player from Slovakia. On 22 April 2002, Suchá reached her career-high WTA singles ranking of No. 37. She won two WTA Tour singles titles at the 2002 ANZ Tasmanian International and the Tournoi de Québec. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Martina Suchá is the 793rd most popular tennis player (up from 827th in 2019), the 298th most popular biography from Slovakia (up from 309th in 2019) and the 13th most popular Slovak Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Martina Suchá by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Martina Suchá ranks 793 out of 1,569Before her are Jimmy Arias, Sjeng Schalken, Nadiia Kichenok, Jean-Julien Rojer, Allan Stone, and Yayuk Basuki. After her are Conchita Martínez Granados, Eleni Daniilidou, Betsy Nagelsen, Denis Istomin, Beatriz Haddad Maia, and Virginie Razzano.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1980, Martina Suchá ranks 523Before her are Basta, Wael Ghonim, Olga Lyubimova, Martin Jakubko, Stefano Mauri, and Jason James Richter. After her are Andy Ram, Lee Si-yeon, Alexandra Jiménez, Max Greenfield, Mihael Mikić, and Karen Asrian.

Others Born in 1980

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Martina Suchá ranks 298 out of 418Before her are Vratislav Greško (1977), Kamil Kopúnek (1984), Kornel Saláta (1985), Tomáš Hubočan (1985), Pavol Hochschorner (1979), and Martin Jakubko (1980). After her are Elena Kaliská (1972), Erik Jendrišek (1986), Ján Kozák (1980), Marek Sapara (1982), Martin Dúbravka (1989), and Ivan Schranz (1993).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Slovakia

Among tennis players born in Slovakia, Martina Suchá ranks 13Before her are Janette Husárová (1974), Jarmila Wolfe (1987), Karol Kučera (1974), Anna Karolína Schmiedlová (1994), Dominik Hrbatý (1978), and Martin Kližan (1989). After her are Magdaléna Rybáriková (1988), Karina Habšudová (1973), Karol Beck (1982), Filip Polášek (1985), Norbert Gombos (1990), and Lukáš Lacko (1987).