SKIER

Olga Charvátová

1962 - Today

Photo of Olga Charvátová

Icon of person Olga Charvátová

Olga Charvátová (Czech pronunciation: [ˈolɡa ˈxarvaːtovaː], born 11 June 1962 in Gottwaldov, now Zlín), also known Olga Křížová, is a retired Czech alpine skier who represented Czechoslovakia. At the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Charvátová won a bronze medal in the downhill event. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Olga Charvátová is the 351st most popular skier (up from 394th in 2019), the 941st most popular biography from Czechia (up from 954th in 2019) and the 12th most popular Czech Skier.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Olga Charvátová by language

Loading...

Among SKIERS

Among skiers, Olga Charvátová ranks 351 out of 817Before her are Arianna Follis, Fulvio Valbusa, Cristian Zorzi, Sara Hector, Risto Jussilainen, and Justyna Kowalczyk. After her are Hippolyt Kempf, Virpi Sarasvuo, Marlies Schild, Tami Kiuru, Mikhail Devyatyarov, and Olga Danilova.

Most Popular Skiers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1962, Olga Charvátová ranks 758Before her are Dominic Keating, Christiane Weber, Bonnie Bassler, Guillermo Martínez, Noh Soo-jin, and José Batista. After her are Poonam Dhillon, Javier Zeoli, Om Birla, Cristieana Cojocaru, Harald Winkler, and Mark Pellington.

Others Born in 1962

Go to all Rankings

In Czechia

Among people born in Czechia, Olga Charvátová ranks 941 out of 1,200Before her are Josef Vašíček (1980), David Kostelecký (1975), Zdeněk Štybar (1985), Lukáš Rosol (1985), Marek Suchý (1988), and Petr Nedvěd (1971). After her are Leoš Friedl (1977), Albert Rusnák (1994), František Kaberle (1973), Martin Straka (1972), Roman Turek (1970), and Bohdan Ulihrach (1975).

Among SKIERS In Czechia

Among skiers born in Czechia, Olga Charvátová ranks 12Before her are Helena Šikolová (1949), Blanka Paulů (1954), Lukáš Bauer (1977), Květa Jeriová (1956), František Jež (1970), and Dagmar Švubová (1958). After her are Kateřina Neumannová (1973), Jan Hudec (1981), Roman Koudelka (1989), Jiří Magál (1977), Martin Koukal (1978), and Šárka Strachová (1985).