CYCLIST

Sandy Casar

1979 - Today

Photo of Sandy Casar

Icon of person Sandy Casar

Sandy Casar (born 2 February 1979) is a French former professional racing cyclist, who competed as a professional between 2000 and 2013, all for the Française des Jeux team. His greatest results have been winning three stages of the Tour de France, as well the overall classification of the Route du Sud in 2005. He also won the one-day race Paris–Camembert in 2011. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Sandy Casar is the 869th most popular cyclist (up from 915th in 2019), the 5,933rd most popular biography from France (up from 6,042nd in 2019) and the 94th most popular French Cyclist.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Sandy Casar by language

Loading...

Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Sandy Casar ranks 869 out of 1,613Before him are Fernando Gaviria, Ashleigh Moolman Pasio, Dylan Teuns, Alexander Bocharov, Janek Tombak, and Nicolas Portal. After him are Rubén Pérez, Matthew Goss, Pietro Caucchioli, Alberto Bettiol, Gorka Izagirre, and Maximiliano Richeze.

Most Popular Cyclists in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Sandy Casar ranks 830Before him are Dmitriy Vassiliev, Olesya Forsheva, Sareh Bayat, Atsuhiko Mori, Ana Đokić, and Nicolas Portal. After him are Daniel Johns, Jesse Bradford, Ferydoon Zandi, Jennifer Finnigan, Wiradech Kothny, and Ladislav Nagy.

Others Born in 1979

Go to all Rankings

In France

Among people born in France, Sandy Casar ranks 5,933 out of 6,770Before him are Loïc Négo (1991), Cyprien Sarrazin (1994), Sabrina Ouazani (1988), Marie Dorin Habert (1986), Joyce Jonathan (1989), and Nicolas Portal (1979). After him are Mehdi Mostefa (1983), Boubacar Kamara (1999), Najoua Belyzel (1981), Jérémy Morel (1984), Benoît Badiashile (2001), and Dan-Axel Zagadou (1999).

Among CYCLISTS In France

Among cyclists born in France, Sandy Casar ranks 94Before him are Arnaud Tournant (1978), Pierrick Fédrigo (1978), Florian Rousseau (1974), Jean-Cyril Robin (1969), Arnaud Démare (1991), and Nicolas Portal (1979). After him are Didier Rous (1970), Stéphane Augé (1974), Christophe Mengin (1968), David Moncoutié (1975), Jimmy Casper (1978), and Nicolas Roche (1984).