FENCER

Renal Ganeyev

1985 - Today

Photo of Renal Ganeyev

Icon of person Renal Ganeyev

Renal Ramilevich Ganeyev (Russian: Реналь Рамилевич Ганеев, also spelled Ganeev; born 13 January 1985) is a Russian former fencer, who won bronze Olympic medal in the team foil competition at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Renal Ganeyev is the 250th most popular fencer (up from 305th in 2019), the 3,273rd most popular biography from Russia (up from 3,593rd in 2019) and the 23rd most popular Russian Fencer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Renal Ganeyev by language

Loading...

Among FENCERS

Among fencers, Renal Ganeyev ranks 250 out of 349Before him are Igor Tikhomirov, Emese Szász-Kovács, Li Na, Choi Eun-sook, Park Sang-young, and Daniel Jérent. After him are Yuliya Gavrilova, Mariel Zagunis, Veniamin Reshetnikov, Andrea Cassarà, Kim Jun-ho, and Zsolt Nemcsik.

Most Popular Fencers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1985, Renal Ganeyev ranks 943Before him are Yōhei Kajiyama, Jens Byggmark, Kim Seung-yong, Mārtiņš Pļaviņš, Elvedin Džinić, and Alex Clare. After him are Lara Dickenmann, Azizbek Haydarov, Pedro Morales, Oleksandr Yatsenko, John Robinson, and Annike Krahn.

Others Born in 1985

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Renal Ganeyev ranks 3,273 out of 3,761Before him are Larisa Kruglova (1972), Egor Kreed (1994), Magomedrasul Majidov (1986), Vladimir Tarasenko (1991), Maxim Vylegzhanin (1982), and Patimat Abakarova (1994). After him are Maksim Opalev (1979), Oleg Ivanov (1986), Vladimir Maminov (1974), Sebastian Bayer (1986), Albert Selimov (1986), and Kate Grigorieva (1989).

Among FENCERS In Russia

Among fencers born in Russia, Renal Ganeyev ranks 23Before him are Aleksey Frosin (1978), Aleksandr Shirshov (1972), Aida Shanayeva (1986), Anna Sivkova (1982), Aleksey Yakimenko (1983), and Igor Tikhomirov (1963). After him are Yuliya Gavrilova (1989), Veniamin Reshetnikov (1986), Inna Deriglazova (1990), Larisa Korobeynikova (1987), Tatiana Logunova (1980), and Pavel Sukhov (1988).