ATHLETE

María Isabel Urrutia

1965 - Today

Photo of María Isabel Urrutia

Icon of person María Isabel Urrutia

María Isabel Urrutia Ocoró (born 25 March 1965) is a former weightlifter, athlete and politician from Colombia. She won the first ever gold medal for Colombia at the Summer Olympic Games. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 22 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 18 in 2024). María Isabel Urrutia is the 3,173rd most popular athlete (down from 2,687th in 2024), the 204th most popular biography from Colombia (down from 189th in 2019) and the 3rd most popular Colombian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of María Isabel Urrutia by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, María Isabel Urrutia ranks 3,173 out of 6,025Before her are Jörg Hoffmann, Abel Kirui, Elizabeth Williams, Anna Biryukova, Krystsina Tsimanouskaya, and Alina Ivanova. After her are Andrejs Rastorgujevs, Lee Eun-kyung, María Carmen Barea, Daniele Scarpa, Vadim Devyatovskiy, and Markus Schmidt.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1965, María Isabel Urrutia ranks 844Before her are Massimo Crippa, Hippolyt Kempf, Lynda Boyd, Leydy Pech, Patricia Guerra, and Martin Kree. After her are Václav Korunka, Fahrettin Koca, Abdourahman Waberi, Yuri Savichev, Pamela Gidley, and Mikhail Shtalenkov.

Others Born in 1965

Go to all Rankings

In Colombia

Among people born in Colombia, María Isabel Urrutia ranks 204 out of 356Before her are Ximena Restrepo (1969), Carmen Villalobos (1983), Abel Aguilar (1985), Luis Amaranto Perea (1979), Óscar Figueroa (1983), and Natalia Reyes (1987). After her are Henrik Christiansen (null), Miguel Guerrero (1967), Hugo Rodallega (1985), Esteban Chaves (1990), León Villa (1960), and Maritza Rodríguez (1975).

Among ATHLETES In Colombia

Among athletes born in Colombia, María Isabel Urrutia ranks 3Before her are Ximena Restrepo (1969), and Óscar Figueroa (1983). After her are Henrik Christiansen (null), Caterine Ibargüen (1984), Orlando Duque (1974), Diego Salazar (1980), Mabel Mosquera (1969), Yuri Alvear (1986), Luis Fernando López (1979), Sandra Arenas (1993), and Anthony Zambrano (1998).