ATHLETE

Ayana Onozuka

1988 - Today

Photo of Ayana Onozuka

Icon of person Ayana Onozuka

Ayana Onozuka (小野塚彩那, Onozuka Ayana; born March 23, 1988) is a Japanese freestyle skier. She won a bronze medal at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics and the 2013 FIS Freestyle World Ski Championships. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ayana Onozuka is the 6,611th most popular athlete (up from 7,130th in 2019), the 5,238th most popular biography from Japan (down from 4,875th in 2019) and the 120th most popular Japanese Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Ayana Onozuka by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Ayana Onozuka ranks 6,611 out of 6,025Before her are David Barnes, Ilya Shkurenyov, Are Strandli, Egor Yakovlev, Sarah Attar, and Mikheil Kajaia. After her are Marco Fichera, Megan Kalmoe, Katherine Grainger, Oksana Livach, Robert Baran, and Melissa Humana-Paredes.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1988, Ayana Onozuka ranks 1,564Before her are Keisuke Hayashi, Daniel Chávez, Tomáš Hořava, Are Strandli, Eric Lichaj, and Hiroki Oka. After her are Rocío Sánchez Moccia, Tsukasa Morimoto, Mink van der Weerden, Dejan Majstorović, Takamasa Sakai, and Artem Anisimov.

Others Born in 1988

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Ayana Onozuka ranks 5,251 out of 6,245Before her are Yudai Ogawa (1996), Yusuke Muta (1990), Hiroki Oka (1988), Yuki Morikawa (1993), Kosuke Okanishi (1990), and Atsushi Shirota (1991). After her are Hiroto Goya (1994), Kaito Kubo (1993), Yudai Nishikawa (1986), Kohei Hattanda (1990), Takanori Chiaki (1987), and Tomoya Koyamatsu (1995).

Among ATHLETES In Japan

Among athletes born in Japan, Ayana Onozuka ranks 120Before her are Takuya Haneda (1987), Ikuma Horishima (1997), Sakura Yosozumi (2002), Ryutaro Araga (1990), Eri Yamada (1984), and Yoshihide Kiryū (1995). After her are Tatsuru Saito (2002), Tatsunori Otsuka (2000), Kazuma Tomoto (1983), Koki Ikeda (1998), Sky Brown (2008), and Taku Hiraoka (1995).