ATHLETE

Ayumu Hirano

1998 - Today

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Ayumu Hirano (平野 歩夢, Hirano Ayumu; born 29 November 1998) is a Japanese Olympic champion and three-time Olympic medalist snowboarder and Olympic skateboarder. He won the silver medal in the superpipe in 2013 Winter X Games XVII at the age of 14, becoming the youngest medalist in X Games history, and won silver medals in the half-pipe at both the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi and the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang and the gold medal at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. He also competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo as a skateboarder, becoming one of the two athletes, the other being Jaqueline Mourão, who participated in all of the three consecutive Olympic Games in East Asia between 2018 and 2022. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ayumu Hirano is the 5,385th most popular athlete (down from 4,956th in 2019), the 4,348th most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,259th in 2019) and the 89th most popular Japanese Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Ayumu Hirano ranks 5,385 out of 6,025Before him are Mathieu Lemoine, Linn Persson, Norbert Hosnyánszky, Inge Janssen, Wang Xin, and Fredrik Pettersson. After him are Saleh Al-Sharabaty, Kristin Gierisch, Franziska Hildebrand, Miryam Roper, Andreas Hofmann, and Darkhan Assadilov.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1998, Ayumu Hirano ranks 381Before him are Zachary Gordon, Anthony Zambrano, Jarrett Allen, Óscar Rodríguez, Payton Pritchard, and Frederik Rodenberg. After him are Saleh Al-Sharabaty, Jack Scanlon, Kenny Bednarek, Shayne Pattynama, Honoka Hayashi, and Amanda Gorman.

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In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Ayumu Hirano ranks 4,361 out of 6,245Before him are Miho Nonaka (1997), Taku Harada (1982), Takayoshi Toda (1979), Hajime Eto (1973), Akari Kurishima (1994), and Hikaru Mita (1981). After him are Ryoma Watanabe (1996), Daisuke Aono (1979), Paulo Junichi Tanaka (1993), Kento Misao (1996), Suguru Awaji (1989), and Kohei Tanaka (1985).

Among ATHLETES In Japan

Among athletes born in Japan, Ayumu Hirano ranks 89Before him are Hisayoshi Harasawa (1992), Miho Takeda (1976), Reiko Tosa (1976), Mayumi Yamashita (1975), Satsuki Fujisawa (1991), and Masako Chiba (1976). After him are Kie Kusakabe (1978), Yukiko Ueno (1982), Hina Hayata (2000), Yoshiaki Oiwa (1976), Ryota Yamagata (1992), and Tetsuto Yamada (1992).