ATHLETE

Linnea Stensils

1994 - Today

Photo of Linnea Stensils

Icon of person Linnea Stensils

Linnea Stensils (born 8 March 1994) is a Swedish canoeist. She competed in the women's K-1 200 metres event at the 2016 Summer Olympics. She qualified to represent Sweden in the 2020 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Linnea Stensils is the 9,586th most popular athlete, the 1,943rd most popular biography from Sweden and the 219th most popular Swedish Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Linnea Stensils by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Linnea Stensils ranks 9,586 out of 6,025Before her are Alexis Santos, Rasmus Højgaard, Abdel-Aziz Mehelba, Lois Maikel Martínez, Amelie Wortmann, and Pavel Širuček. After her are Ethan Cormont, Nicole Pircio, Roland Gálos, Chelsea Forkin, Souleymen Nasr, and Hiroto Ohhara.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1994, Linnea Stensils ranks 1,627Before her are Afef Ben Ismail, Manuel Esteban Soto, Moriya Jutanugarn, Robin Tabeling, Simone Christensen, and Arjan Knipping. After her are Tursynbay Kulakhmet, Olivier Mwimba, Park Hee-jun, Wu Tongtong, Joshua Hurlburt-Yu, and Oliver Wynne-Griffith.

Others Born in 1994

Go to all Rankings

In Sweden

Among people born in Sweden, Linnea Stensils ranks 1,943 out of 1,879Before her are Jesper Stålheim (1988), Louise Romeike (1990), Isabelle Andersson (2000), Victor Johansson (1998), Nikita Glasnović (1995), and Emil Blomberg (1992). After her are Sanzhar Mussayev (1996), Emelie Fast (2004), Vidar Johansson (1996), David Rumbutis (2000), Emil Järudd (1998), and Madelene Sagström (1992).

Among ATHLETES In Sweden

Among athletes born in Sweden, Linnea Stensils ranks 219Before her are Alena Nazdrova (1998), Oskar Sunnefeldt (1998), Jesper Stålheim (1988), Louise Romeike (1990), Nikita Glasnović (1995), and Emil Blomberg (1992). After her are Sanzhar Mussayev (1996), Vidar Johansson (1996), David Rumbutis (2000), Emil Järudd (1998), Madelene Sagström (1992), and Noelia Vargas (2000).