ATHLETE

Mimi Hristova

1993 - Today

Photo of Mimi Hristova

Icon of person Mimi Hristova

Mimi Nikolova Hristova (Bulgarian: Мими Христова, born 19 July 1993) is a Bulgarian freestyle wrestler. She competed in the women's freestyle 58 kg event at the 2016 Summer Olympics, in which she was eliminated in the round of 32 by Pürevdorjiin Orkhon. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Mimi Hristova is the 6,914th most popular athlete (down from 6,749th in 2019), the 427th most popular biography from Bulgaria (down from 425th in 2019) and the 51st most popular Bulgarian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mimi Hristova by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Mimi Hristova ranks 6,914 out of 6,025Before her are Adam van Koeverden, David Carter, Elena Arzhakova, Jacob Schopf, Gayane Chiloyan, and Aleksandra Lisowska. After her are Rasmus Mägi, Carissa Moore, Pete Reed, Katsiaryna Halkina, David Pasqualucci, and Su Yiming.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1993, Mimi Hristova ranks 1,347Before her are Francesco Di Fulvio, Merve Çoban, Ramona Straub, Jadson Alves dos Santos, Yukitoshi Ito, and Benjamin Uphoff. After her are Hirotaka Tameda, Guilherme Almeida, Aisha Dee, John Mary, Chikara Hanada, and Dipa Karmakar.

Others Born in 1993

Go to all Rankings

In Bulgaria

Among people born in Bulgaria, Mimi Hristova ranks 427 out of 415Before her are Gabriela Stoeva (1994), Elitsa Yankova (1994), Violeta G. Ivanova (2000), Bozhidar Andreev (1997), Stefani Stoeva (1995), and Bilyana Dudova (1997). After her are Stanimira Petrova (1990), Ivet Goranova (2000), Daniel Asenov (1997), Krisia Todorova (2004), Aleksandrina Naydenova (1992), and Simona Dyankova (1994).

Among ATHLETES In Bulgaria

Among athletes born in Bulgaria, Mimi Hristova ranks 51Before her are Valentin Hristov (1994), Velichko Cholakov (1982), Gabriela Petrova (1992), Kiril Milov (1997), Antoaneta Kostadinova (1986), and Bozhidar Andreev (1997). After her are Stanimira Petrova (1990), Ivet Goranova (2000), Daniel Asenov (1997), Simona Dyankova (1994), Tihomir Ivanov (1994), and Yanislav Gerchev (1989).