ATHLETE

Natalya Nazarova

1979 - Today

Photo of Natalya Nazarova

Icon of person Natalya Nazarova

Natalya Viktorovna Nazarova (Russian: Наталья Викторовна Назарова, born May 26, 1979, Moscow) is a track and field sprinter. She was born in Moscow. Following a personal best time of 49.65 seconds run a fortnight earlier, Natalya had lost form by the start of the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, and only just made the final finishing 8th. She won a silver medal in the relay run and finished fourth at the 2003 World Championships. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 24 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 23 in 2024). Natalya Nazarova is the 3,419th most popular athlete (up from 3,480th in 2024), the 2,972nd most popular biography from Russia (up from 3,061st in 2019) and the 206th most popular Russian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Natalya Nazarova by language

Loading...

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Natalya Nazarova ranks 660Before her are Keisuke Tsuboi, Muhammad Ali, Prince of the Sa'id, Danela Arsovska, Raio Piiroja, Tommy Clufetos, and Jaime Lozano. After her are Soprano, Deanna Russo, Emilie Autumn, Jenny Wolf, Janne Wirman, and Cameron Richardson.

Others Born in 1979

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Natalya Nazarova ranks 2,972 out of 3,761Before her are Andrey Merzlikin (1973), Svetlana Zhurova (1972), Andrey Silnov (1984), Sharif Sharifov (1988), Yegor Titov (1976), and Aleksandr Popov (1965). After her are Alexander Petrov (1989), Mariya Kiselyova (1974), Liliya Shobukhova (1977), Anton Shipulin (1987), Ilze Liepa (1963), and Dmitry Jakovenko (1983).

Among ATHLETES In Russia

Among athletes born in Russia, Natalya Nazarova ranks 206Before her are Vladimir Drachev (1966), Evgeny Ustyugov (1985), Magomed Ibragimov (null), Roman Monchenko (1964), Andrey Silnov (1984), and Aleksandr Popov (1965). After her are Liliya Shobukhova (1977), Anton Shipulin (1987), José Ramos (null), Svetlana Goncharenko (1971), Ivan Ukhov (1986), and Dmitri Sautin (1974).