TENNIS PLAYER

Rebeka Masarova

1999 - Today

Photo of Rebeka Masarova

Icon of person Rebeka Masarova

Rebeka Masarova (Slovak: Rebeka Masárová, pronounced [ˈrebeka ˈmasaːrɔʋa]; born 6 August 1999) is a Swiss professional tennis player. She has career-high WTA rankings of No. 62 in singles and No. 125 in doubles achieved in 2023. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Rebeka Masarova is the 1,081st most popular tennis player (up from 1,197th in 2019), the 885th most popular biography from Switzerland (up from 920th in 2019) and the 14th most popular Swiss Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Rebeka Masarova by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Rebeka Masarova ranks 1,081 out of 1,569Before her are Kristina Barrois, Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Alejandro Tabilo, Latisha Chan, Elizabeth Smylie, and Stephen Huss. After her are Radu Albot, Matwé Middelkoop, Magdalena Fręch, Robby Ginepri, Shuko Aoyama, and Helen Kelesi.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1999, Rebeka Masarova ranks 209Before her are Saxon Sharbino, Laufey, Katelyn Nacon, Boubacar Kamara, Dan-Axel Zagadou, and Ethan Cutkosky. After her are Facundo Medina, Luca Pellegrini, Emmanouil Karalis, Nic Claxton, Danielle Rose Russell, and Fred Hechinger.

Others Born in 1999

Go to all Rankings

In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Rebeka Masarova ranks 885 out of 1,015Before her are Shkëlzen Gashi (1988), Pajtim Kasami (1992), Maya Pedersen-Bieri (1972), Marcel Fischer (1978), Ardon Jashari (2002), and Lia Wälti (1993). After her are Silvan Dillier (1990), Jolanda Neff (1993), Miloš Veljković (1995), Philipp Schoch (1979), Pirmin Schwegler (1987), and Arlind Ajeti (1993).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Switzerland

Among tennis players born in Switzerland, Rebeka Masarova ranks 14Before her are Timea Bacsinszky (1989), Bettina Bunge (1963), Emmanuelle Gagliardi (1976), Marco Chiudinelli (1981), Romina Oprandi (1986), and Viktorija Golubic (1992). After her are Yves Allegro (1978), Stefanie Vögele (1990), Marie-Gaïané Mikaelian (1984), Dominic Stricker (2002), and Marc-Andrea Hüsler (1996).