SKIER

Heikki Hasu

1926 - 2025

Photo of Heikki Hasu

Icon of person Heikki Hasu

Heikki Vihtori Hasu (21 March 1926 – 5 April 2025) was a Finnish Nordic skier who competed in the 1948 and 1952 Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Heikki Hasu is the 3rd most popular skier (up from 85th in 2019), the 49th most popular biography from Finland (up from 305th in 2019) and the most popular Finnish Skier.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Heikki Hasu by language

Loading...

Among SKIERS

Among skiers, Heikki Hasu ranks 3 out of 817Before him are Ingemar Stenmark, and Jean-Claude Killy. After him are Matti Nykänen, Toni Sailer, Eddie the Eagle, Alberto Tomba, Bjørn Dæhlie, Franz Klammer, Sixten Jernberg, Birger Ruud, and Annemarie Moser-Pröll.

Most Popular Skiers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1926, Heikki Hasu ranks 91Before him are David H. Hubel, Ta Mok, Richard Matheson, Noah Gordon, George C. Williams, and Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart, 18th Duchess of Alba. After him are César Pelli, Shigeo Sugimoto, Hugo Banzer, Teddy Scholten, John Schlesinger, and Hans Werner Henze. Among people deceased in 2025, Heikki Hasu ranks 56Before him are Sam Nujoma, Alasdair MacIntyre, Lalo Schifrin, Georgios Roubanis, Ferdi Tayfur, and Max Romeo. After him are Bertrand Blier, Joan Plowright, Akinori Nakayama, Dag Solstad, James Foley, and Stanley Fischer.

Others Born in 1926

Go to all Rankings

Others Deceased in 2025

Go to all Rankings

In Finland

Among people born in Finland, Heikki Hasu ranks 49 out of 751Before him are Antti Aarne (1867), Zachris Topelius (1818), Ari Vatanen (1952), Alexander Stubb (1968), Kimi Räikkönen (1979), and Jari Litmanen (1971). After him are Liisi Oterma (1915), Eliel Saarinen (1873), Hugo Simberg (1873), Matti Nykänen (1963), Aino Aalto (1894), and Armi Kuusela (1934).

Among SKIERS In Finland

Among skiers born in Finland, Heikki Hasu ranks 1After him are Matti Nykänen (1963), Juha Mieto (1949), Antti Hyvärinen (1932), Janne Ahonen (1977), Jouko Törmänen (1954), Aulis Kallakorpi (1929), Marja-Liisa Kirvesniemi (1955), Toini Pöysti (1933), Toini Gustafsson (1938), Paavo Lonkila (1923), and Tapio Mäkelä (1926).