HANDBALL PLAYER

Vladimir Šujster

1972 - Today

Photo of Vladimir Šujster

Icon of person Vladimir Šujster

Vladimir Šujster (born 26 May 1972) is a retired Croatian handball player. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 19 different languages on Wikipedia. Vladimir Šujster is the 222nd most popular handball player (up from 309th in 2024), the 577th most popular biography from Croatia (up from 617th in 2019) and the 20th most popular Croatian Handball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Vladimir Šujster by language

Loading...

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS

Among handball players, Vladimir Šujster ranks 222 out of 420Before him are Aron Pálmarsson, Ana Đokić, Carmen Martín, Rodrigo Corrales, Vid Kavtičnik, and Joan Cañellas. After him are Denis Krivoshlykov, Andrea Lekić, Vedran Zrnić, Dainis Krištopāns, Goran Šprem, and Denis Buntić.

Most Popular Handball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1972, Vladimir Šujster ranks 1,069Before him are Darren Ferguson, Jiro Takeda, Charlie Haas, Konstantin Landa, Yolanda Soler, and Garo Paylan. After him are Lucian Marinescu, Christa Campbell, Sean Dundee, Paul Okon, Ville Räikkönen, and Ahmed Maiteeq.

Others Born in 1972

Go to all Rankings

In Croatia

Among people born in Croatia, Vladimir Šujster ranks 577 out of 700Before him are Marko Rog (1995), Siniša Skelin (1974), Goran Sablić (1979), Ante Tomić (1983), Sara Kolak (1995), and Vjekoslav Škrinjar (1969). After him are Vedran Zrnić (1979), Goran Šprem (1979), Tanja Stupar-Trifunović (1977), Igor Hinić (1975), Biljana Borzan (1971), and Goran Bunjevčević (1973).

Among HANDBALL PLAYERS In Croatia

Among handball players born in Croatia, Vladimir Šujster ranks 20Before him are Davor Dominiković (1978), Bruno Gudelj (1966), Ivan Čupić (1986), Valner Franković (1968), Manuel Štrlek (1988), and Marko Kopljar (1986). After him are Vedran Zrnić (1979), Goran Šprem (1979), Nikša Kaleb (1973), Zlatko Horvat (1984), Drago Vuković (1983), and Renato Sulić (1979).