ATHLETE

Jack Marton

1992 - Today

Photo of Jack Marton

Icon of person Jack Marton

Jack Marton (born 7 July 1992) is an Australian taekwondo practitioner. He won the gold medal in the men's 74 kg event at the 2015 Pacific Games held in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. He repeated this in 2019 with the gold medal in the men's 80 kg event at the 2019 Pacific Games held in Apia, Samoa. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jack Marton is the 9,889th most popular athlete (down from 9,466th in 2019), the 1,907th most popular biography from Netherlands (down from 1,822nd in 2019) and the 245th most popular Dutch Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Jack Marton by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Jack Marton ranks 9,889 out of 6,025Before him are Wyatt Sanford, Galsan Bazarzhapov, Kaia Parnaby, Alise Fakhrutdinova, Claudymar Garcés, and Murali Sreeshankar. After him are Vincent Matheron, Radwa Abdel Latif, Niels Van Zandweghe, Igor Mogne, Dagmar Genee, and Asimenye Simwaka.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1992, Jack Marton ranks 2,010Before him are Lenchu Kunzang, Pavel Širuček, Raquel Kochhann, Elena Berta, André Sanita, and Ezinne Kalu. After him are Ronald Musagala, Rose Mary Almanza, Alexis Santos, Benjamin Bildstein, Alois Knabl, and Eddie Lovett.

Others Born in 1992

Go to all Rankings

In Netherlands

Among people born in Netherlands, Jack Marton ranks 1,908 out of 1,646Before him are Nelson Ritsema (1994), Ryan Chew (1996), Tim Brand (1998), Matthew Richardson (null), Irene van der Reijken (1993), and Andrea Bouma (1999). After him are Dagmar Genee (1989), Hanna Shevchuk (1996), Samuel Gathimba (1987), Anne van Dam (1995), Albert Torres (null), and Joris van Gool (1998).

Among ATHLETES In Netherlands

Among athletes born in Netherlands, Jack Marton ranks 245Before him are Merel Blom (1986), Nelson Ritsema (1994), Tim Brand (1998), Matthew Richardson (null), Irene van der Reijken (1993), and Andrea Bouma (1999). After him are Dagmar Genee (1989), Hanna Shevchuk (1996), Samuel Gathimba (1987), Anne van Dam (1995), Albert Torres (null), and Joris van Gool (1998).