CYCLIST

Sergei Ivanov

1975 - Today

Photo of Sergei Ivanov

Icon of person Sergei Ivanov

Sergei Valeryevich Ivanov (Серге́й Валерьевич Иванов) (born 5 March 1975) is a former professional road bicycle racer, who competed between 1996 and 2011. Ivanov had been a member of six different teams, competing for CSKA Lada–Samara, TVM–Farm Frites, Fassa Bortolo, T-Mobile Team, Astana and Team Katusha. In this time he completed in five Grand Tours, and also won six national championship titles. He also won the Tour de Pologne 1998. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Sergei Ivanov is the 410th most popular cyclist (up from 453rd in 2019), the 2,518th most popular biography from Russia (up from 2,648th in 2019) and the 9th most popular Russian Cyclist.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Sergei Ivanov by language

Loading...

Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Sergei Ivanov ranks 410 out of 1,613Before him are Donald Burgess, Andrew Hampsten, Jakob Fuglsang, Erik Dekker, Gert Frank, and Levi Leipheimer. After him are Oscar Camenzind, Tony Martin, Eros Poli, Jean-René Bernaudeau, Lutz Heßlich, and Danilo Di Luca.

Most Popular Cyclists in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1975, Sergei Ivanov ranks 312Before him are Ekaterina Zakharieva, Balthazar Getty, Miyuki Izumi, Nicky Butt, Andrés Scotti, and Ralph Firman. After him are Rie Yamaki, Gastón Mazzacane, Peter Ho, Danny Chan Kwok-kwan, Jutta Urpilainen, and Sofi Marinova.

Others Born in 1975

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Sergei Ivanov ranks 2,518 out of 3,761Before him are Nina Rocheva (1948), Aleksandr Uvarov (1960), Kristina Orbakaitė (1971), Andrei Cherkasov (1970), Vladimir Jurowski (1972), and Anfisa Reztsova (1964). After him are Yuri Balashov (1949), Oleg Pashinin (1974), Svetlana Khorkina (1979), Polina Gagarina (1987), Eduard Ivanov (1938), and Leyla Aliyeva (1984).

Among CYCLISTS In Russia

Among cyclists born in Russia, Sergei Ivanov ranks 9Before him are Viatcheslav Ekimov (1966), Denis Menchov (1978), Pavel Tonkov (1969), Evgeni Berzin (1970), Dimitri Konyshev (1966), and Anatoly Chukanov (1954). After him are Alexandr Kolobnev (1981), Olga Zabelinskaya (1980), Viktor Manakov (1960), Vladimir Karpets (1980), Evgeni Petrov (1978), and Alexei Markov (1979).