ATHLETE

Denis Gankin

1989 - Today

Photo of Denis Gankin

Icon of person Denis Gankin

Denis Pavlovich Gankin (Денис Павлович Ганькин, born 13 December 1989 in Taldykorgan, Kazakh SSR, Soviet Union) is a Kazakhstani archer. He competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where he reached the second round. He is the brother of Artyom Gankin. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Denis Gankin is the 7,932nd most popular athlete (up from 8,777th in 2019), the 220th most popular biography from Kazakhstan (up from 233rd in 2019) and the 48th most popular Kazakhstani Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Denis Gankin by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Denis Gankin ranks 7,932 out of 6,025Before him are Aleh Yurenia, Yang Chun-han, Anhelina Lysak, Evelise Veiga, Ayumi Uekusa, and Pierre Le Corre. After him are Rowena Webster, Piotr Kuczera, Katsuyuki Tanamura, Milka Kraljev, Elena Quirici, and Manoel Messias.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1989, Denis Gankin ranks 1,750Before him are Szymon Rduch, Sébastien Dockier, Mohamed Reda El Aaraby, Claudia Rivas, Shane Lowry, and Cillian Sheridan. After him are Amini Fonua, Katsuyuki Tanamura, Jay Blankenau, Mana Atsumi, Ceiber Ávila, and Jung Jin-hwa.

Others Born in 1989

Go to all Rankings

In Kazakhstan

Among people born in Kazakhstan, Denis Gankin ranks 220 out of 193Before him are Sofya Berultseva (2000), Ilfat Abdullin (1998), Viktor Antipin (1992), Islam Bozbayev (1991), Alisher Yergali (1999), and Aslanbek Shymbergenov (1993). After him are Meirzhan Shermakhanbet (1996), Denis Ulanov (1993), Zhaina Shekerbekova (1989), Mikhail Litvin (1996), Irving Pérez (1986), and Gennadij Cudinovic (1994).

Among ATHLETES In Kazakhstan

Among athletes born in Kazakhstan, Denis Gankin ranks 48Before him are Meirambek Ainagulov (1994), Sofya Berultseva (2000), Ilfat Abdullin (1998), Islam Bozbayev (1991), Alisher Yergali (1999), and Aslanbek Shymbergenov (1993). After him are Denis Ulanov (1993), Zhaina Shekerbekova (1989), Mikhail Litvin (1996), Irving Pérez (1986), Gennadij Cudinovic (1994), and Mekides Abebe (2001).