ATHLETE

Bence Halász

1997 - Today

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Bence Halász (born 4 August 1997) is a Hungarian athlete specialising in the hammer throw. He won the silver medal at the 2024 Summer Olympics and also the bronze medal at the 2019 and the 2023 World Championships. In addition, he won gold medals at the 2017 European U23 Championships and 2016 World U20 Championships. In 2018 he won a bronze medal at the European Championships in Berlin. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 23 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 15 in 2024). Bence Halász is the 5,863rd most popular athlete (down from 5,086th in 2024), the 1,078th most popular biography from Hungary (down from 1,031st in 2019) and the 166th most popular Hungarian Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Bence Halász ranks 5,863 out of 6,025Before him are Jennifer Dahlgren, Bojan Tokić, Daniel Deusser, Jakub Hanák, Townsend Saunders, and Dan Hardy. After him are Andy Anderson, Zalina Petrivskaya, Martin Annen, Eva Calvo, Alina Komashchuk, and Antonio Díaz.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1997, Bence Halász ranks 530Before him are Beatrice Vio, Christina Robinson, Simon Martirosyan, Manuela Giugliano, Tamara Zidanšek, and Lim Jong-hoon. After him are Romain Cannone, Asia Ramazan Antar, Nathaniel Coleman, Ricardo Ávila, Jacob Rasmussen, and Oleksandr Tymchyk.

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In Hungary

Among people born in Hungary, Bence Halász ranks 1,078 out of 1,077Before him are Rajmund Fodor (1976), Dénes Varga (1987), Barnabás Bese (1994), Kinga Bóta (1977), Zsolt Kalmár (1995), and Tamás Varga (1975). After him are Endre Botka (1994), Szilvia Szabó (1978), Dávid Verrasztó (1988), Marianna Sastin (1983), Norbert Madaras (1979), and Bernadett Szél (1977).

Among ATHLETES In Hungary

Among athletes born in Hungary, Bence Halász ranks 166Before him are Krisztián Bártfai (1974), Tamara Csipes (1989), Rajmund Fodor (1976), Dénes Varga (1987), Kinga Bóta (1977), and Tamás Varga (1975). After him are Szilvia Szabó (1978), Krisztián Veréb (1977), Péter Módos (1987), Kristóf Rasovszky (1997), Norbert Hosnyánszky (1984), and Attila Vári (1976).