HANDBALL PLAYER

Samuel Honrubia

1986 - Today

Photo of Samuel Honrubia

Icon of person Samuel Honrubia

Samuel Honrubia (born 5 July 1986) is a former French handball player, who competed for and the French national team. He has competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics, where France won the gold medal. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Samuel Honrubia is the 312th most popular handball player (up from 336th in 2019), the 6,249th most popular biography from France (up from 6,387th in 2019) and the 24th most popular French Handball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Samuel Honrubia by language

Loading...

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS

Among handball players, Samuel Honrubia ranks 312 out of 420Before him are Denis Špoljarić, Jonas Larholm, Ángel Fernández Pérez, Nely Carla Alberto, Rikke Skov, and Mattias Gustafsson. After him are Kasper Søndergaard, Tonči Valčić, Ágnes Farkas, Diego Simonet, Bartosz Jurecki, and Yana Uskova.

Most Popular Handball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, Samuel Honrubia ranks 1,027Before him are Myriam Soumaré, Kevin Seeldraeyers, Wánderson, Ksenija Balta, Jasmin Fejzić, and Evandro Goebel. After him are Adam Kokoszka, Yuliya Zaripova, Andrej Sekera, Saber Khalifa, Sergio Álvarez, and Ayesha Takia.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In France

Among people born in France, Samuel Honrubia ranks 6,249 out of 6,770Before him are Yoane Wissa (1996), Franck Queudrue (1978), Jimmy Vicaut (1992), Chadli Amri (1984), Liassine Cadamuro (1988), and Myriam Soumaré (1986). After him are Alexandre Letellier (1990), Camille Lacourt (1985), Océane Dodin (1996), Romain Feillu (1984), Kadidiatou Diani (1995), and Habib Bamogo (1982).

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS In France

Among handball players born in France, Samuel Honrubia ranks 24Before him are Alexandra Lacrabère (1987), William Accambray (1988), Xavier Barachet (1988), Melvyn Richardson (1997), Valentin Porte (1990), and Guillaume Joli (1985). After him are Grâce Zaadi (1993), Blandine Dancette (1988), Yann Genty (1981), Nicolas Tournat (1994), Cédric Paty (1981), and Cléopatre Darleux (1989).