SOCCER PLAYER

Élodie Thomis

1986 - Today

Photo of Élodie Thomis

Icon of person Élodie Thomis

Élodie Ginette Thomis (French: [e.lɔ.di ʒi.nɛt tɔ.mis]; born 13 August 1986) is a French former football player who played for French club Lyon of the Division 1 Féminine. She played either a winger or striker and was described as a player who possesses pace comparable to that of French men's internationals Thierry Henry and Sidney Govou. Thomis is a graduate of the women's section of the Clairefontaine academy and was a French women's international having made her debut with the team in June 2005 at UEFA Women's Euro 2005 against Italy. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 22 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 21 in 2024). Élodie Thomis is the 12,983rd most popular soccer player (up from 13,169th in 2024), the 6,227th most popular biography from France (up from 6,250th in 2019) and the 626th most popular French Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Élodie Thomis by language

Loading...

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, Élodie Thomis ranks 837Before her are Simon Vukčević, Doria Tillier, Marc Torrejón, Kasper Hämäläinen, Ismaël Traoré, and Andrej Karpathy. After her are Aida Shanayeva, Alexander Grimm, Andreja Klepač, Milan Gajić, Jesse Klaver, and Iasmin Latovlevici.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In France

Among people born in France, Élodie Thomis ranks 6,227 out of 6,770Before her are Richard Gay (1971), Sébastien Amiez (1972), Judith Chemla (1984), Illan Meslier (2000), Abdoulaye Diallo (1992), and Ismaël Traoré (1986). After her are Bilal Hassani (1999), Laura Glauser (1993), Laurent Sciarra (1973), Florian Lejeune (1991), Ludovic Sylvestre (1984), and Jérémy Perbet (1984).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In France

Among soccer players born in France, Élodie Thomis ranks 626Before her are Marie-Laure Delie (1988), William Vainqueur (1988), Floyd Ayité (1988), Illan Meslier (2000), Abdoulaye Diallo (1992), and Ismaël Traoré (1986). After her are Florian Lejeune (1991), Ludovic Sylvestre (1984), Jérémy Perbet (1984), Loïc Badé (2000), Yohan Mollo (1989), and Elye Wahi (2003).