HANDBALL PLAYER

Silvio Heinevetter

1984 - Today

Photo of Silvio Heinevetter

Icon of person Silvio Heinevetter

Silvio Heinevetter (born 21 October 1984) is a German handballer for TVB 1898 Stuttgart and the German national team. He participated at the 2019 World Men's Handball Championship. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia. Silvio Heinevetter is the 358th most popular handball player (down from 269th in 2024), the 7,055th most popular biography from Germany (down from 6,622nd in 2019) and the 23rd most popular German Handball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Silvio Heinevetter by language

Loading...

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS

Among handball players, Silvio Heinevetter ranks 358 out of 420Before her are Ágnes Farkas, Diego Simonet, Lotte Kiærskou, Bartosz Jurecki, Yana Uskova, and Sonja Barjaktarović. After her are Mads Christiansen, Florian Kehrmann, Nadine Krause, Tess Wester, Tetyana Shynkarenko, and Suzana Lazović.

Most Popular Handball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1984, Silvio Heinevetter ranks 1,064Before her are Matteo Anesi, Lars Petter Nordhaug, Thomas Vanek, Akihiro Sakata, Apoño, and Igor Angulo. After her are Rubens Sambueza, Martina Stella, Miroslav Radović, Luis Ángel Maté, Marko Perović, and Angelique Widjaja.

Others Born in 1984

Go to all Rankings

In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Silvio Heinevetter ranks 7,058 out of 7,253Before her are Bryan Reynolds (null), Hany Mukhtar (1995), Gracia Baur (1982), Alexander Schwolow (1992), Atiye (1988), and Stefan Bell (1991). After her are Andromache (1994), Danny Ecker (1977), Jann-Fiete Arp (2000), Arthur Abele (1986), Florian Kehrmann (1977), and Anna Frebel (1980).

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS In Germany

Among handball players born in Germany, Silvio Heinevetter ranks 23Before her are Torsten Jansen (1976), Grit Jurack (1977), Andreas Wolff (1991), Volker Zerbe (1968), Pascal Hens (1980), and Mark Dragunski (1970). After her are Florian Kehrmann (1977), Nadine Krause (1982), Vitali Ivanov (1976), Christian Zeitz (1980), Tobias Reichmann (1988), and Patrick Wiencek (1989).