SKIER

Wendy Holdener

1993 - Today

Photo of Wendy Holdener

Icon of person Wendy Holdener

Wendy Holdener (born 12 May 1993) is a Swiss World Cup alpine ski racer who specialises in slalom and combined. She is a two-time World champion in combined and a five-time Olympic medalist, four individual with one gold medal in the team event at Pyeongchang in 2018. Four years later in 2022, she won a silver medal in the combined. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Wendy Holdener is the 378th most popular skier (up from 426th in 2019), the 807th most popular biography from Switzerland (up from 847th in 2019) and the 35th most popular Swiss Skier.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Wendy Holdener by language

Loading...

Among SKIERS

Among skiers, Wendy Holdener ranks 378 out of 817Before her are Sigrid Wolf, Alexandra Meissnitzer, Kateřina Neumannová, Charlotte Kalla, Manfred Deckert, and Svetlana Nageykina. After her are Damjan Fras, Beat Feuz, Christer Majbäck, Brigitte Oertli, Tommy Moe, and Dominik Paris.

Most Popular Skiers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1993, Wendy Holdener ranks 250Before her are Iris Mittenaere, Adam Ondra, Brandon Flynn, Silvan Widmer, Oliver Tree, and Álex Abrines. After her are Nik Stauskas, Laura Dahlmeier, Mate Pavić, Danielle Collins, Rauw Alejandro, and Mariya Yaremchuk.

Others Born in 1993

Go to all Rankings

In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Wendy Holdener ranks 807 out of 1,015Before her are Stefan Küng (1993), Xavier Margairaz (1984), Thomas Wyss (1966), Thomas Lüthi (1986), Silvan Widmer (1993), and Patrick Sylvestre (1968). After her are Beat Feuz (1987), Marcel Fässler (1976), Martin Gerber (1974), Sébastien Fournier (1971), Renato Steffen (1991), and Brigitte Oertli (1962).

Among SKIERS In Switzerland

Among skiers born in Switzerland, Wendy Holdener ranks 35Before her are Max Julen (1961), Ursula Konzett (1959), Sonja Nef (1972), Hippolyt Kempf (1965), Carlo Janka (1986), and Corinne Rey-Bellet (1972). After her are Beat Feuz (1987), Brigitte Oertli (1962), Dominique Gisin (1986), Andreas Küttel (1979), Silvan Zurbriggen (1981), and Marco Büchel (1971).