ATHLETE

Janne Lahtela

1974 - Today

Photo of Janne Lahtela

Icon of person Janne Lahtela

Janne Lahtela (born 28 February 1974) is a Finnish former athlete, who established himself as one of the most dominant persons in the history of moguls skiing. He is currently the head coach of Japan's freestyle skiing team. He also is a key founder and sponsor for the IDOne ski company based out of Japan. Lahtela was born in Kemijärvi. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Janne Lahtela is the 3,354th most popular athlete (down from 2,722nd in 2019), the 549th most popular biography from Finland (down from 500th in 2019) and the 102nd most popular Finnish Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Janne Lahtela by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Janne Lahtela ranks 3,354 out of 6,025Before him are Hugues Obry, Charlie Spedding, Andrey Silnov, Daniel Komen, Michele Frangilli, and Derrick Adkins. After him are László Fidel, Dorothee Schneider, Davis Kamoga, Natalya Nazarova, Wu Minxia, and Susan Francia.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Janne Lahtela ranks 695Before him are Fanis Katergiannakis, Joan Horrach, David Robert Mitchell, David Jemmali, Javi Navarro, and Markus Weinzierl. After him are Tetiana Ostashchenko, Mariya Kiselyova, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Karin Moroder, Amarilis Savón, and Paul Kariya.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Finland

Among people born in Finland, Janne Lahtela ranks 549 out of 751Before him are Mikko Leppilampi (1978), Valtteri Filppula (1984), Pekka Rinne (1982), Fredrik Norrena (1973), Hannu Virta (1963), and Kiira Korpi (1988). After him are Janne Wirman (1979), Aleksander Barkov Jr. (1995), Li Andersson (1987), Kalle Palander (1977), Jenni Haukio (1977), and Kjell Carlström (1976).

Among ATHLETES In Finland

Among athletes born in Finland, Janne Lahtela ranks 102Before him are Tapio Sipilä (1958), Heli Rantanen (1970), Arsi Harju (1974), Satu Mäkelä-Nummela (1970), Aki Parviainen (1974), and Mikko Kolehmainen (1964). After him are Kimmo Kinnunen (1968), Markku Uusipaavalniemi (1966), Thomas Johanson (1969), Niklas Hagman (1979), Valentin Kononen (1969), and Jari Mantila (1971).