ATHLETE

Imrich Bugár

1955 - Today

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Imrich Bugár (Hungarian: Bugár Imre, born 14 April 1955) is a Czechoslovak discus thrower. An ethnic Hungarian who represented Czechoslovakia and then the Czech Republic, his career highlights include an Olympic silver medal from 1980, a European Championship title from 1982 and a gold medal in the inaugural World Championships in 1983. His personal best throw of 71.26 metres puts him tenth in the all-time performers list. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Imrich Bugár is the 1,881st most popular athlete (up from 1,947th in 2019), the 235th most popular biography from Slovakia (up from 248th in 2019) and the 8th most popular Slovak Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Imrich Bugár ranks 1,881 out of 6,025Before him are Sabine Busch, Kalevi Hämäläinen, Sven-Åke Lundbäck, James Corson, George Gulack, and Naftali Bon. After him are Andrey Abduvaliyev, Chris Brown, Delfo Cabrera, Georg de Laval, Endre Tilli, and Leonid Shcherbakov.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1955, Imrich Bugár ranks 457Before him are Olivier Rouyer, Cheryl Studer, Guy Lacombe, Nicolas Hulot, Yevgeniya Simonova, and Leonid Mikhelson. After him are Jacques N'Guea, William Hope, Mohammad Rabbani, Matthias Behr, Ethan Phillips, and Barbara Petzold.

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In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Imrich Bugár ranks 235 out of 418Before him are Mikuláš Galanda (1895), Ján Figeľ (1960), Pavol Biroš (1953), Stanislav Griga (1961), Dominika Cibulková (1989), and Herman Steiner (1905). After him are Ľubomír Ftáčnik (1957), Jozef Pribilinec (1960), Juraj Kucka (1987), Miroslav Stoch (1989), Tibor Serly (1901), and Peter Tomka (1956).

Among ATHLETES In Slovakia

Among athletes born in Slovakia, Imrich Bugár ranks 8Before him are Vladimír Dzurilla (1942), Imre Németh (1917), Pavel Schmidt (1930), József Csermák (1932), Ferenc Sidó (1923), and Béla Szepes (1903). After him are Jozef Pribilinec (1960), Dušan Pašek (1960), Michal Martikán (1979), Pavol Hochschorner (1979), Elena Kaliská (1972), and Pavol Hurajt (1978).