ATHLETE

Sergey Semenov

1995 - Today

Photo of Sergey Semenov

Icon of person Sergey Semenov

Sergey Viktorovich Semenov (Russian: Сергей Викторович Семёнов, IPA: [sʲɪrˈɡʲej sʲɪˈmʲɵnəf]; born 10 August 1995) is a Russian Greco-Roman wrestler. 2018 senior world champion. 2x Olympic bronze medalist, 2024 European champion, 2017 World Cup winner, 2017 U23 World champion. In 2020, he won the gold medal in the 130 kg event at the Individual Wrestling World Cup held in Belgrade, Serbia. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Sergey Semenov is the 5,105th most popular athlete (down from 4,251st in 2019), the 3,452nd most popular biography from Russia (down from 3,268th in 2019) and the 322nd most popular Russian Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Sergey Semenov ranks 5,105 out of 6,025Before him are Paweł Wojciechowski, Omar McLeod, Kimberly Williams, Otis Harris, Kim Je-deok, and Yang Wenjun. After him are Simon Martirosyan, Bojan Tokić, Daniel Deusser, Dan Hardy, Bence Halász, and Andy Anderson.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1995, Sergey Semenov ranks 543Before him are Wang Chi-lin, Maciej Musiał, Myrto Uzuni, Sanne van Dijke, Emiliano Marcondes, and Zsolt Kalmár. After him are Lucas Veríssimo, Kaetlyn Osmond, Tyronne Ebuehi, Abderrahman Samba, Andrew Hjulsager, and Rafael Vitti.

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In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Sergey Semenov ranks 3,452 out of 3,761Before him are Varteres Samurgashev (1976), Darya Kustova (1986), Dmitri Kalinin (1980), Sofya Ochigava (1987), Evgeny Donskoy (1990), and Artem Markelov (1994). After him are Georgi Dzhikiya (1993), Mikhail Aleshin (1987), Natalya Baranova-Masalkina (1975), Irina Avvakumova (1991), Nikita Gusev (1992), and Zalina Petrivskaya (1988).

Among ATHLETES In Russia

Among athletes born in Russia, Sergey Semenov ranks 322Before him are Anna Alminova (1985), Anna Pyatykh (1981), Yuliya Skokova (1982), Aleksandr Menkov (1990), Maxim Chudov (1982), and Larisa Ilchenko (1988). After him are Zalina Petrivskaya (1988), Anisya Kirdyapkina (1989), Svetlana Podobedova (1986), Natalia Kuziutina (1989), Lyudmila Litvinova (1985), and Lisa Ryzih (1988).