SWIMMER

Aya Terakawa

1984 - Today

Photo of Aya Terakawa

Icon of person Aya Terakawa

Aya Terakawa (寺川綾, Terakawa Aya) (born November 12, 1984) is a retired Japanese backstroke swimmer; she announced her retirement from competitions in early December 2013. She is married to former swimmer Daisuke Hosokawa. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Aya Terakawa is the 527th most popular swimmer (down from 480th in 2019), the 4,523rd most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,496th in 2019) and the 19th most popular Japanese Swimmer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Aya Terakawa by language

Loading...

Among SWIMMERS

Among swimmers, Aya Terakawa ranks 527 out of 709Before her are Giedrius Titenis, Danila Izotov, Joseph Schooling, Sara Isaković, Kenneth To, and Mélanie Henique. After her are Megan Jendrick, Mehdy Metella, Simona Quadarella, Leisel Jones, Nikolay Skvortsov, and Tang Yi.

Most Popular Swimmers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1984, Aya Terakawa ranks 1,330Before her are Park Ju-sung, Álvaro Parente, Christine Ohuruogu, Naoki Sugai, Bassa Mawem, and Melky Cabrera. After her are Megan Jendrick, Natália Falavigna, Yaowapa Boorapolchai, Nikolay Skvortsov, Nobuhiro Kato, and Emmanuel Lucenti.

Others Born in 1984

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Aya Terakawa ranks 4,536 out of 6,245Before her are Naoki Sugai (1984), Norihiro Kawakami (1987), Naoya Umeda (1978), Yukari Nakano (1985), Daiki Hattori (1987), and Go Kaburaki (1977). After her are Kenta Togawa (1981), Kai Hirano (1987), Hiroyuki Endo (1986), Hiroyuki Nishijima (1982), Kazuhiro Kawata (1982), and An Byong-jun (1990).

Among SWIMMERS In Japan

Among swimmers born in Japan, Aya Terakawa ranks 19Before her are Ryosuke Irie (1990), Reiko Nakamura (1982), Takeshi Matsuda (1984), Satomi Suzuki (1991), Takuro Fujii (1985), and Yui Ohashi (1995). After her are Rie Kaneto (1988), Katsumi Nakamura (1994), Yukiko Inui (1990), Tomoru Honda (2001), Natsumi Hoshi (1990), and Ippei Watanabe (1997).