ATHLETE

Hiroki Muto

1997 - Today

Photo of Hiroki Muto

Icon of person Hiroki Muto

Hiroki Muto (Japanese: 武藤 弘樹, Mutō Hiroki) is a Japanese archer. He competed in Archery at the 2020 Summer Olympics. In the bronze medal match of the Men's team event, Muto hit a do-or-die bullseye in the tie-breaker set to win bronze for Japan. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Hiroki Muto is the 7,210th most popular athlete (down from 7,182nd in 2019), the 5,805th most popular biography from Japan (down from 4,910th in 2019) and the 132nd most popular Japanese Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Hiroki Muto by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Hiroki Muto ranks 7,210 out of 6,025Before him are Hasan Ali, Tom Ransley, Victoria Sauze, Maria-Magdalena Rusu, Gülbadam Babamuratowa, and Hur Kyoung-min. After him are Kyle Ensing, Laura Lindemann, Tommy Fleetwood, Maja Mihalinec Zidar, Irina Dolgova, and Saul Weigopwa.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1997, Hiroki Muto ranks 915Before him are Osman Göçen, Jochem Dobber, Julio Pleguezuelo, Ablaikhan Zhussupov, Luke Greenbank, and Ciprian Tudosă. After him are Kyle Ensing, Ayumu Nagato, Josie Knight, Song Jiayuan, Matija Sarkic, and Tokuma Suzuki.

Others Born in 1997

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Hiroki Muto ranks 5,818 out of 6,245Before him are Shuto Kawai (1993), Tatsuya Wada (1994), Shuhei Matsubara (1992), Kenji Sekido (1990), Takuya Shigehiro (1995), and Ryoga Sekihara (1991). After him are Takuji Yokoyama (1990), Kanta Kondo (1993), Masaya Yamamoto (1991), Ayumu Nagato (1997), Riku Handa (2002), and Yuki Hatanaka (1993).

Among ATHLETES In Japan

Among athletes born in Japan, Hiroki Muto ranks 132Before him are Taku Hiraoka (1995), Kokona Hiraki (2008), Sorato Anraku (2006), Wataru Morishige (2000), Yukiyo Mine (1988), and Yukie Nakayama (1979). After him are Oleh Tsarkov (1988), Funa Nakayama (2005), Ai Mori (2003), Amuro Tsuzuki (2001), Ayumi Fukushima (1983), and Nozomi Satō (1986).