ATHLETE

Andy Díaz

1995 - Today

Photo of Andy Díaz

Icon of person Andy Díaz

Andy Díaz Hernández (born 25 December 1995) is a Cuban-born Italian athlete specialising in the triple jump. He represented Cuba at the 2017 World Championships, finishing seventh in the final. He traveled to the 2020 Summer Olympics but did not compete due to injury. He later defected to Italy. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Andy Díaz is the 5,249th most popular athlete (down from 4,350th in 2019), the 292nd most popular biography from Cuba (down from 261st in 2019) and the 64th most popular Cuban Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Andy Díaz by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Andy Díaz ranks 5,249 out of 6,025Before him are Marina Karpunina, Lorène Bazolo, Natalia Vodopyanova, Sergey Bakulin, Michelle Freeman, and Alisa Camplin. After him are Ditaji Kambundji, Milad Beigi, Dmitry Larionov, Feryal Abdelaziz, Lee Mi-gyeong, and John-John Dohmen.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1995, Andy Díaz ranks 572Before him are Tacko Fall, Margaret Wambui, Marvin Friedrich, McKayla Maroney, Sory Kaba, and Mouez Hassen. After him are Marc Cardona, Maximilian Marterer, Cees Bol, Akari Hayami, Awer Mabil, and Rafael Ratão.

Others Born in 1995

Go to all Rankings

In Cuba

Among people born in Cuba, Andy Díaz ranks 292 out of 300Before him are Yurisel Laborde (1979), Yunaika Crawford (1982), Ibrahim Camejo (1982), Emilio Correa (1985), Luis Orta (1994), and Maykel Massó (1999). After him are Jordan Díaz (2001), Yoandri Betanzos (1982), Fernando Jorge (1998), Serguey Torres (1987), Arlenis Sierra (1992), and Elis Manolova (1996).

Others born in Cuba

Go to all Rankings

Among ATHLETES In Cuba

Among athletes born in Cuba, Andy Díaz ranks 64Before him are Orlando Ortega (1991), Reineris Salas (1987), Yurisel Laborde (1979), Yunaika Crawford (1982), Ibrahim Camejo (1982), and Maykel Massó (1999). After him are Jordan Díaz (2001), Yoandri Betanzos (1982), Fernando Jorge (1998), Serguey Torres (1987), Yampier Hernández (1984), and Federico Gil (null).