SKIER

Olga Danilova

1970 - Today

Photo of Olga Danilova

Icon of person Olga Danilova

Olga Valeryevna Danilova (Russian: Ольга Валерьевна Данилова; born 10 June 1970 in Bugulma, Tatar ASSR, Russian SFSR) is a Russian cross-country skier who competed from 1991 until she was banned for using performance-enhancing drugs in 2002. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Olga Danilova is the 357th most popular skier (up from 400th in 2019), the 2,853rd most popular biography from Russia (up from 2,967th in 2019) and the 12th most popular Russian Skier.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Olga Danilova by language

Loading...

Among SKIERS

Among skiers, Olga Danilova ranks 357 out of 817Before her are Olga Charvátová, Hippolyt Kempf, Virpi Sarasvuo, Marlies Schild, Tami Kiuru, and Mikhail Devyatyarov. After her are Anna Ottosson, Christian Hoffmann, Edgar Grospiron, Anders Bardal, Heinz Kuttin, and Carlo Janka.

Most Popular Skiers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1970, Olga Danilova ranks 698Before her are Jens Keller, Szilveszter Csollány, Susan Abulhawa, Rafael Pascual, Roman Turek, and John Moore. After her are Toni Jiménez, Audra McDonald, Hiroshi Saito, Nicole Sullivan, Antoni Lima, and Irv Gotti.

Others Born in 1970

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Olga Danilova ranks 2,853 out of 3,761Before her are Mikhail Shtalenkov (1965), Mikhail Devyatyarov (1959), Lilia Vaygina-Efremova (1977), Olga Kaniskina (1985), Khetag Gazyumov (1983), and Igor Polyansky (1967). After her are Yelena Podkaminskaya (1979), Nikolay Pimenov (null), Alex Bogomolov Jr. (1983), Andrei Kravchuk (1962), Aleksandr Anyukov (1982), and Elizaveta Boyarskaya (1985).

Among SKIERS In Russia

Among skiers born in Russia, Olga Danilova ranks 12Before her are Nikolay Anikin (1932), Larisa Lazutina (1965), Yelena Vyalbe (1968), Lyubov Yegorova (1966), Alexey Prokurorov (1964), and Mikhail Devyatyarov (1959). After her are Tamara Tikhonova (1964), Svetlana Nageykina (1965), Olga Medvedtseva (1975), Yuliya Chepalova (1976), Nina Gavrylyuk (1965), and Svetlana Gladysheva (1971).