VOLLEYBALL PLAYER

Erika Araki

1984 - Today

Photo of Erika Araki

Icon of person Erika Araki

Erika Araki (荒木 絵里香, Araki Erika; born 3 August 1984) is a retired Japanese volleyball player. She served as captain for the national team from 2009 to 2012. She competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics winning a bronze medal, and 2020 Summer Olympics, in Women's volleyball which she was the captain. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia. Erika Araki is the 222nd most popular volleyball player (down from 163rd in 2024), the 4,287th most popular biography from Japan (down from 2,920th in 2019) and the 8th most popular Japanese Volleyball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Erika Araki by language

Loading...

Among VOLLEYBALL PLAYERS

Among volleyball players, Erika Araki ranks 222 out of 199Before her are Maxwell Holt, Cansu Özbay, Barthélémy Chinenyeze, Ekaterina Antropova, Miyuki Takahashi, and Yacine Louati. After her are Tandara Caixeta, Bojana Milenković, Jean Patry, Katarzyna Skowrońska-Dolata, Nataliya Goncharova, and Jordan Thompson.

Most Popular Volleyball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1984, Erika Araki ranks 1,195Before her are Bruno Moraes, Jaroslav Bába, Lena Waithe, Heiko Schaffartzik, Loukas Mavrokefalidis, and Nuno Morais. After her are Hamed Namouchi, Emmanuel Kipchirchir Mutai, Linn Jørum Sulland, Kanu, Doka Madureira, and Renat Yanbayev.

Others Born in 1984

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Erika Araki ranks 4,300 out of 6,245Before her are Kazunari Okayama (1978), Takashi Kamoshida (1985), Naoya Tsukahara (1977), Haruka Kitaguchi (1998), Yuki Fukushima (1993), and Yukihiro Aoba (1979). After her are Kosuke Hagino (1994), Masaru Kurotsu (1982), Kenta Shimaoka (1973), Kentaro Kawasaki (1982), Yoshinari Hyakutake (1977), and Yuki Fuji (1981).

Among VOLLEYBALL PLAYERS In Japan

Among volleyball players born in Japan, Erika Araki ranks 8Before her are Takako Shirai (1952), Saori Kimura (1986), Yūki Ishikawa (1995), Yoshie Takeshita (1978), Yūko Sano (1979), and Miyuki Takahashi (1978).