WRESTLER

Ezio Gamba

1958 - Today

Photo of Ezio Gamba

Icon of person Ezio Gamba

Ezio Gamba (born 2 December 1958) is a retired judoka from Italy, who represented his native country at four consecutive Olympic Games (1976, 1980, 1984 and 1988). Gamba claimed the gold medal in the men's lightweight division (‍–‍71 kg) in 1980 by defeating Great Britain's Neil Adams. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ezio Gamba is the 329th most popular wrestler (down from 248th in 2019), the 4,171st most popular biography from Italy (down from 4,159th in 2019) and the 7th most popular Italian Wrestler.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Ezio Gamba by language

Loading...

Among WRESTLERS

Among wrestlers, Ezio Gamba ranks 329 out of 1,027Before him are Rikishi, Soslan Andiyev, Diamond Dallas Page, Pavel Pinigin, Frederick Humphreys, and Scott Steiner. After him are Jim Neidhart, Brian Christopher, Ștefan Rusu, Roman Dmitriyev, Cody Rhodes, and Matt Hardy.

Most Popular Wrestlers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1958, Ezio Gamba ranks 480Before him are Bengt-Åke Gustafsson, Rik Mayall, Barbara Crampton, Christian Lindberg, Georges Bregy, and Pascale Ogier. After him are Vitaly Mutko, Amrita Singh, Roddy Doyle, Anita Baker, Choguel Kokalla Maïga, and Scott Rudin.

Others Born in 1958

Go to all Rankings

In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Ezio Gamba ranks 4,172 out of 5,161Before him are Antonio Candreva (1987), Francesco Nuti (1955), Giacomo Bonaventura (1989), Pier Carlo Padoan (1950), Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi (1942), and Luigi Piotti (1913). After him are Maurizio Fondriest (1965), Gabriele Rossetti (1783), Uberto De Morpurgo (1896), Luca Bucci (1969), Angelo Scuri (1959), and Fabrizio Miccoli (1979).

Among WRESTLERS In Italy

Among wrestlers born in Italy, Ezio Gamba ranks 7Before him are Bruno Sammartino (1935), Enrico Porro (1885), Antonino Rocca (1921), Ignazio Fabra (1930), Angelo Parisi (1953), and Lou Albano (1933). After him are Vincenzo Maenza (1962), Andrea Minguzzi (1982), Giuseppe Maddaloni (1976), Odette Giuffrida (1994), Alice Bellandi (1998), and Manuel Lombardo (1998).