ATHLETE

Sergio Suzuki

1994 - Today

Photo of Sergio Suzuki

Icon of person Sergio Suzuki

Sergio Suzuki (born 9 October 1994) is a Japanese male taekwondo practitioner of Bolivian descent who mainly competes in flyweight category. He represented Japan at the 2018 Asian Games and claimed a bronze medal in the men's 58kg flyweight event. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Sergio Suzuki is the 8,567th most popular athlete, the 6,156th most popular biography from Japan and the 166th most popular Japanese Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Sergio Suzuki by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Sergio Suzuki ranks 8,567 out of 6,025Before him are Thiago André, Sebastián Martos, Wannes Van Laer, Szandra Pergel, Nina Sterckx, and Magdiel Estrada. After him are Elise Rechichi, Lidiia Sichenikova, Failuna Abdi Matanga, Bryce Deadmon, Samuel Parot, and Peter Bol.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1994, Sergio Suzuki ranks 1,473Before him are Molly Seidel, Zourah Ali, Aina Cid, Shachar Sagiv, Tomoya Takahata, and Magdiel Estrada. After him are Hanna Malyshchyk, Hiroki Maeda, Ryuta Miyauchi, Madison Wilson, Jordan Pothain, and Taishi Nishioka.

Others Born in 1994

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Sergio Suzuki ranks 6,156 out of 6,245Before him are Kento Umeki (1999), Nasa Hataoka (1999), Shota Yomesaka (1996), Tomoya Takahata (1994), Shogo Shimohata (1992), and Junto Taguchi (1996). After him are Shuta Doi (1996), Kohei Kitagawa (1995), Hiroki Maeda (1994), Ryo Hasegawa (1999), Ryoga Ishio (2000), and Daiki Enomoto (1996).

Among ATHLETES In Japan

Among athletes born in Japan, Sergio Suzuki ranks 166Before him are Urara Ashikawa (2003), Makoto Odakura (1993), Emi Nishikori (1993), Steffen Olsen (1983), Yuri Nagai (1992), and Nasa Hataoka (1999). After him are Shugo Imahira (1992), Miho Miyahara (1996), Hazuki Nagai (1994), Jan Jirka (1993), Yusuke Shimizu (1988), and Atsushi Arai (1994).