ATHLETE

Tamara Manina

1934 - Today

Photo of Tamara Manina

Icon of person Tamara Manina

Tamara Ivanovna Manina (Russian: Тама́ра Ива́новна Ма́нина; born 16 September 1934) is a retired Soviet Olympic gymnast and a sports scientist. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Tamara Manina is the 1,833rd most popular athlete (down from 1,318th in 2019), the 2,277th most popular biography from Russia (down from 2,212th in 2019) and the 86th most popular Russian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Tamara Manina by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Tamara Manina ranks 1,833 out of 6,025Before her are Darya Domracheva, Yulia Ryabchinskaya, Tamara Bykova, John McNally, Haruki Uemura, and Rinnat Safin. After her are Bob Hayes, Rudolf Plyukfelder, Juhani Suutarinen, Harold Smith, Curtis Stevens, and Teodor Kocerka.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1934, Tamara Manina ranks 487Before her are Birutė Kalėdienė, István Csurka, Gilbert Strang, Antonina Ryzhova, Jean Wendling, and Willard Scott. After her are Calvin Lockhart, Tammy Grimes, Chris Bonington, Valentina Stenina, Pierre Joxe, and Cedar Walton.

Others Born in 1934

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Tamara Manina ranks 2,277 out of 3,761Before her are Pavel Tonkov (1969), Eteri Tutberidze (1974), Alexei Venediktov (1955), Tamara Bykova (1958), Rinnat Safin (1940), and Leonid Sedov (1907). After her are Svetlana Tširkova-Lozovaja (1945), Viktor Vinogradov (1894), Kira Ivanova (1963), Maria Vorontsova (1985), Fedor Samokhin (1918), and Aleksey Buldakov (1951).

Among ATHLETES In Russia

Among athletes born in Russia, Tamara Manina ranks 86Before her are Nadezhda Ilyina (1949), Olga Kuzenkova (1970), Yury Sisikin (1937), Grigory Mkrtychan (1925), Tamara Bykova (1958), and Rinnat Safin (1940). After her are Lyudmila Titova (1946), Tatyana Talysheva (1937), Valentina Yegorova (1964), Ardalion Ignatyev (1930), Andrey Abduvaliyev (1966), and Leonid Shcherbakov (1927).