ATHLETE

Oksana Yermakova

1973 - Today

Photo of Oksana Yermakova

Icon of person Oksana Yermakova

Oksana Ivanovna Yermakova (Russian: Оксана Ивановна Ермакова, Estonian: Oksana Jermakova, also spelled Oxana Ermakova, born 16 April 1973) is an Estonian and Russian épée fencer. She represented Soviet Union in 1991, Estonia in 1992–1997 and Russia in 1998–2005. She won two gold medals in the team épée event at the 2000 and 2004 Summer Olympics. She competed for Estonia at the 1996 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Oksana Yermakova is the 2,749th most popular athlete (up from 2,930th in 2019), the 226th most popular biography from Estonia (up from 241st in 2019) and the 19th most popular Estonian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Oksana Yermakova by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Oksana Yermakova ranks 2,749 out of 6,025Before her are Jaouad Gharib, Ivana Španović, Svetlana Kitova, Thomas Mitchell, Jens Müller, and Anier García. After her are Birgit Peter, Trischa Zorn, Giuseppe Abbagnale, Noor Alam, Phil Brown, and Egil Gjelland.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1973, Oksana Yermakova ranks 497Before her are Alex Kurtzman, Hicham Arazi, Paula Radcliffe, Zé Maria, Thuy Trang, and Sinnamon Love. After her are Tom Tugendhat, Souleymanou Hamidou, Eddie Cibrian, Egil Gjelland, Thomas Myhre, and Eri Fukatsu.

Others Born in 1973

Go to all Rankings

In Estonia

Among people born in Estonia, Oksana Yermakova ranks 226 out of 351Before her are Jüri Jaanson (1965), Kadri Simson (1977), Andrus Kivirähk (1970), Aleksander Tammert (1973), Kaia Kanepi (1985), and Lenna Kuurmaa (1985). After her are Stig Rästa (1980), Margus Tsahkna (1977), Katrin Siska (1983), Kaija Parve (1964), Rein Taaramäe (1987), and Mart Poom (1972).

Among ATHLETES In Estonia

Among athletes born in Estonia, Oksana Yermakova ranks 19Before her are Arnold Luhaäär (1905), Kalevi Kotkas (1913), Erki Nool (1970), Bruno Junk (1929), Gerd Kanter (1979), and Aleksander Tammert (1973). After her are Kaija Parve (1964), Jaak Mae (1972), Tõnu Tõniste (1967), Andrus Värnik (1977), Aleksei Budõlin (1976), and Roland Lessing (1978).