BADMINTON PLAYER

Hiroyuki Endo

1986 - Today

Photo of Hiroyuki Endo

Icon of person Hiroyuki Endo

Hiroyuki Endo (遠藤 大由, Endō Hiroyuki; born 16 December 1986) is a retired Japanese badminton player. He competed at the 2016 Rio and 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics. In 2009, he joined the Unisys badminton team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 13 different languages on Wikipedia. Hiroyuki Endo is the 129th most popular badminton player (down from 85th in 2024), the 4,782nd most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,147th in 2019) and the 14th most popular Japanese Badminton Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Hiroyuki Endo by language

Loading...

Among BADMINTON PLAYERS

Among badminton players, Hiroyuki Endo ranks 129 out of 117Before him are Zheng Siwei, Goh Liu Ying, Lianne Tan, Wei Yili, Pullela Gopichand, and Kevin Cordón. After him are Kim Astrup, Marc Zwiebler, Jung Kyung-eun, Huang Sui, Soh Wooi Yik, and Lee Jae-jin.

Most Popular Badminton Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, Hiroyuki Endo ranks 1,511Before him are Damien Gaudin, Emiliano Armenteros, Sam Palladio, Kevin Cordón, Akmal Shorakhmedov, and Stefan Hula Jr.. After him are Yusuke Nakamura, Franck Dja Djédjé, Julian Edelman, Kevin Parker, Mario Escobar, and Renato Arapi.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Hiroyuki Endo ranks 4,795 out of 6,245Before him are Daiki Hattori (1987), Go Kaburaki (1977), Aya Terakawa (1984), Kenta Togawa (1981), Yuya Matsushita (1990), and Kai Hirano (1987). After him are Hiroyuki Nishijima (1982), Kazuhiro Kawata (1982), An Byong-jun (1990), Kohei Kato (1989), Yusuke Nakamura (1986), and Nobuhiro Kato (1984).

Among BADMINTON PLAYERS In Japan

Among badminton players born in Japan, Hiroyuki Endo ranks 14Before him are Yuki Fukushima (1993), Nami Matsuyama (1998), Miyuki Maeda (1985), Reika Kakiiwa (1989), Sho Sasaki (1982), and Mizuki Fujii (1988). After him are Arisa Higashino (1996), Mayu Matsumoto (1995), Sayaka Hirota (1994), Kodai Naraoka (2001), Takeshi Kamura (1990), and Wakana Nagahara (1996).