SKATER

Oksana Baiul

1977 - Today

Photo of Oksana Baiul

Icon of person Oksana Baiul

Oksana Serhiyivna Baiul-Farina (née Baiul; born November 16, 1977) is a Ukrainian retired competitive figure skater. She is the 1993 world champion and the 1994 Olympic champion in ladies' singles. Baiul is the first Olympic Champion from Ukraine to compete under the Ukrainian flag. Baiul is the second skater representing Ukraine to win gold at the Winter Olympics after Viktor Petrenko in 1992. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Oksana Baiul is the 170th most popular skater (down from 161st in 2019), the 1,013th most popular biography from Ukraine (down from 1,007th in 2019) and the 3rd most popular Ukrainian Skater.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Oksana Baiul by language

Loading...

Among SKATERS

Among skaters, Oksana Baiul ranks 170 out of 483Before her are Bam Margera, Emese Hunyady, Brian Boitano, Albena Denkova, Kay Stenshjemmet, and Brian Joubert. After her are Irina Slutskaya, Gabi Zange, Viktor Petrenko, Jozef Sabovčík, Marina Klimova, and Zhao Hongbo.

Most Popular Skaters in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1977, Oksana Baiul ranks 314Before her are Justo Villar, Danijel Šarić, Atsushi Yanagisawa, Alessandro Lucarelli, Felix van Groeningen, and Mirza Džomba. After her are Martin Laursen, Erjon Bogdani, Didier Dinart, Mehmet Aurélio, Iván Kaviedes, and Henri Camara.

Others Born in 1977

Go to all Rankings

In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Oksana Baiul ranks 1,013 out of 1,365Before her are Alexander Almetov (1940), Elena Vesnina (1986), Tatiana Gutsu (1976), Anna Sedokova (1982), Valentyn Nalyvaichenko (1966), and Pavlo Yakovenko (1964). After her are Valeriy Heletey (1967), Viktor Petrenko (1969), Nataliya Dobrynska (1982), Denis Berezovsky (1974), Iryna Vereshchuk (1979), and Yaroslav Popovych (1980).

Among SKATERS In Ukraine

Among skaters born in Ukraine, Oksana Baiul ranks 3Before her are Oleg Goncharenko (1931), and Tatiana Navka (1975). After her are Viktor Petrenko (1969), Oksana Grishuk (1974), Artur Dmitriev (1968), Aljona Savchenko (1984), Evgeni Platov (1967), Tatiana Volosozhar (1986), and Ruslan Honcharov (1973).