ATHLETE

Nina Christen

1994 - Today

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Nina Christen (born 7 February 1994) is a Swiss sports shooter. She competed in the women's 10 metre air rifle event at the 2016 and 2020 Summer Games, winning bronze in 2020. Winning the 50 m rifle three positions event with an Olympic record, Christen became the first Swiss to claim a gold medal in women's Olympic shooting. She also won Bronze in the 10m air rifle event. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Nina Christen is the 5,137th most popular athlete (up from 6,031st in 2019), the 978th most popular biography from Switzerland (up from 1,019th in 2019) and the 58th most popular Swiss Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Nina Christen ranks 5,136 out of 6,025Before her are Debbie Dunn, Alin Moldoveanu, Naomi Folkard, Abderrahman Samba, and Dušan Mandić. After her are Sarah Höfflin, Nathaniel Coleman, Natalia Kuziutina, Lu Chunlong, Aleksandar Ivović, Filippo Tortu, and Keshorn Walcott.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1994, Nina Christen ranks 703Before her are Duckens Nazon, Bruno Armirail, Petrissa Solja, Endre Botka, Dušan Mandić, and Nanu. After her are Xavier Arreaga, Victor Koretzky, Sofiane Oumiha, Simon Tibbling, Bruno Mendes, and Mohammed Osman.

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In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Nina Christen ranks 978 out of 1,015Before her are Giulia Steingruber (1994), Andi Zeqiri (1999), Florijana Ismaili (1995), Ramon Vega (1971), Martin Kohler (1985), and Franco Marvulli (1978). After her are Sarah Höfflin (1991), Mauro Schmid (1999), Heinz Barmettler (1987), Michael Schmid (1984), Raffaele Marciello (1994), and Luca Zuffi (1990).

Among ATHLETES In Switzerland

Among athletes born in Switzerland, Nina Christen ranks 58Before her are Lena Häcki-Groß (1995), Xeno Müller (1972), Daniela Meuli (1981), Gian Simmen (1977), Beat Hefti (1978), and Nevin Galmarini (1986). After her are Sarah Höfflin (1991), Benjamin Weger (1989), Ditaji Kambundji (2002), Andreas Hofmann (null), Lucas Tramèr (1989), and Beat Mändli (1969).