ATHLETE

Darko Jorgić

1998 - Today

Photo of Darko Jorgić

Icon of person Darko Jorgić

Darko Jorgić (born 30 July 1998 in Trbovlje) is a Slovenian table tennis player. He represented his country at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo and won three Europe Top-16 Championships. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 8 different languages on Wikipedia. Darko Jorgić is the 7,187th most popular athlete (down from 5,490th in 2024), the 383rd most popular biography from Slovenia (down from 324th in 2019) and the 35th most popular Slovene Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Darko Jorgić by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Darko Jorgić ranks 7,187 out of 6,025Before him are Jeoung Young-sik, Yasmany Lugo, Tony Jarrett, Natalie Dell, Brandon Laird, and Alexei Klimov. After him are Abdelmalik Lahoulou, Nathan Baggaley, Sofie Dokter, Annabel Vernon, Jeon Hun-young, and Germán Lauro.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1998, Darko Jorgić ranks 565Before him are Santiago Bueno, Satoko Miyahara, Sofiane Alakouch, Ananya Panday, Taiyo Koga, and Ivan Oblyakov. After him are Bilal Boutobba, Alisher Yusupov, Sara Ahmed, Kyle Chalmers, Mikaela Loach, and Amos Pieper.

Others Born in 1998

Go to all Rankings

In Slovenia

Among people born in Slovenia, Darko Jorgić ranks 382 out of 340Before him are Adam Gnezda Čerin (1999), Eva Urevc (1995), Žan Celar (1999), Luka Pibernik (1993), and Ažbe Jug (1992). After him are Blaž Rola (1990), Damjan Bohar (1991), Luka Rupnik (1993), Haris Vučkić (1992), Polona Batagelj (1989), Špela Rogelj (1994), and Tina Pisnik (1981).

Among ATHLETES In Slovenia

Among athletes born in Slovenia, Darko Jorgić ranks 35Before him are Marko Kump (1988), Denis Žvegelj (1972), Anamari Velenšek (1991), Martina Ratej (1981), Adrian Gomboc (1995), and Luka Pibernik (1993). After him are Špela Rogelj (1994), Anita Horvat (1996), Lena Stojković (2002), Mia Krampl (2000), Maja Mihalinec Zidar (1989), and Luka Janežič (1995).