TENNIS PLAYER

Virginie Razzano

1983 - Today

Photo of Virginie Razzano

Icon of person Virginie Razzano

Virginie Razzano (born 12 May 1983) is a French former professional tennis player. She won two WTA Tour singles titles, both in 2007. Razzano reached her career-high WTA singles ranking of No. 16 on 14 September 2009. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 32 different languages on Wikipedia. Virginie Razzano is the 803rd most popular tennis player (up from 804th in 2024), the 5,673rd most popular biography from France (up from 5,765th in 2019) and the 42nd most popular French Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Virginie Razzano by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Virginie Razzano ranks 803 out of 1,569Before her are Martina Suchá, Conchita Martínez Granados, Eleni Daniilidou, Betsy Nagelsen, Denis Istomin, and Beatriz Haddad Maia. After her are Elena Bovina, Andy Ram, Fernando Vicente, Ryan Harrison, Flavio Cobolli, and Nikoloz Basilashvili.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Virginie Razzano ranks 444Before her are Carmen Villalobos, Andriy Rusol, Justyna Kowalczyk, Rachel Starr, Christophe Jallet, and Răzvan Cociș. After her are Elena Bovina, Gabriel Sargissian, Koh Masaki, Óscar Figueroa, Uhm Tae-goo, and Deuce.

Others Born in 1983

Go to all Rankings

In France

Among people born in France, Virginie Razzano ranks 5,673 out of 6,770Before her are Olivia Bonamy (1972), Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet (1973), Christophe Jallet (1983), Ibrahima Traoré (1988), Camille Muffat (1989), and Grégory Fitoussi (1976). After her are Christian Perez (1963), Ludovic Bource (1970), Cyril Montana (1969), Antar Yahia (1982), Camille Abily (1984), and Laurent Gaudé (1972).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In France

Among tennis players born in France, Virginie Razzano ranks 42Before her are Pierre-Hugues Herbert (1991), Julien Benneteau (1981), Sandrine Testud (1972), Alizé Cornet (1990), Loïs Boisson (2003), and Paul-Henri Mathieu (1982). After her are Lucas Pouille (1994), Édouard Roger-Vasselin (1983), Ugo Humbert (1998), Nicolas Escudé (1976), Jérémy Chardy (1987), and Aravane Rezaï (1987).