ATHLETE

Dejan Georgievski

1999 - Today

Photo of Dejan Georgievski

Icon of person Dejan Georgievski

Dejan Georgievski (Macedonian: Дејан Георгиевски; born 8 May 1999) is a Macedonian professional taekwondo practitioner who represents North Macedonia internationally in the World Taekwondo Tournaments in the men's heavyweight (+87 kg) class. He is an Olympic silver medalist in the men's +80 kg event at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Dejan Georgievski is the 6,858th most popular athlete (down from 4,688th in 2019), the 157th most popular biography from North Macedonia (down from 127th in 2019) and the 5th most popular Macedonian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Dejan Georgievski by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Dejan Georgievski ranks 6,858 out of 6,025Before him are Mikael Aggefors, Deon Lendore, Aboubacar Doumbia, Oleg Gusev, Gaila González, and Pedro Barros. After him are Breaux Greer, Roneisha McGregor, Leonel Manzano, Lee Ho Ching, Cassie Sharpe, and Daryll Neita.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1999, Dejan Georgievski ranks 525Before him are Onni Valakari, Jonathan Sacoor, Jacob Schopf, Masaki Satō, Aryan Tari, and Nair Tiknizyan. After him are Vazgen Tevanyan, Maxime Pianfetti, Sondre Guttormsen, Ivan Federico, JuVaughn Harrison, and Clara Copponi.

Others Born in 1999

Go to all Rankings

In North Macedonia

Among people born in North Macedonia, Dejan Georgievski ranks 157 out of 156Before him are Gjoko Zajkov (1995), Filip Ivanovski (1985), Vlatko Stojanovski (1997), Milan Ristovski (1998), Nataša Andonova (1993), and Marjan Radeski (1995). After him are Risto Jankov (1998), Filip Derkoski (2000), and Borjan Brankovski (1996).

Among ATHLETES In North Macedonia

Among athletes born in North Macedonia, Dejan Georgievski ranks 5Before him are Milka Babović (1928), Ace Rusevski (1956), Redžep Redžepovski (1962), and Asmir Kolašinac (1984). After him are Filip Derkoski (2000), and Borjan Brankovski (1996).