SWIMMER

Jay Litherland

1995 - Today

Photo of Jay Litherland

Icon of person Jay Litherland

Jay Litherland (born August 24, 1995) is an American competition swimmer. He represents DC Trident which is part of the International Swimming League. He won the silver medal in the Men's 400 Individual Medley at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics in a time of 4:10.28. He was a World University Games gold medalist at the 2015 Summer Universiade and a bronze medalist at the FINA World Junior Swimming Championships. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jay Litherland is the 615th most popular swimmer (up from 746th in 2019), the 4,961st most popular biography from Japan (up from 5,368th in 2019) and the 26th most popular Japanese Swimmer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Jay Litherland by language

Loading...

Among SWIMMERS

Among swimmers, Jay Litherland ranks 615 out of 709Before him are Gemma Spofforth, Susie O'Neill, Ferry Weertman, Sarah Köhler, Fernando Scheffer, and Lara Grangeon. After him are Masato Sakai, Sergey Fesikov, Ben Wildman-Tobriner, Kylie Palmer, Cecilia Biagioli, and Katerine Savard.

Most Popular Swimmers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1995, Jay Litherland ranks 798Before him are Chris Hamilton, Youssouf Koné, Daeg Faerch, Jacob Murphy, Olivier Verdon, and Will Hughes. After him are Masato Sakai, Mustafizur Rahman, Bilal Başaçıkoğlu, Vladislav Larin, Léo Ceará, and Yuki Kato.

Others Born in 1995

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Jay Litherland ranks 4,974 out of 6,245Before him are Jumpei Shimmura (1988), Masaki Watanabe (1986), Masato Fujita (1986), Yoshinori Katsumata (1985), Sakura Motoki (2002), and Maasa Sudo (1992). After him are Masato Sakai (1995), Ryo Miyake (1990), Shun Tanaka (1988), Hirooki Arai (1988), Yohei Iwasaki (1987), and Ayumi Niekawa (1994).

Among SWIMMERS In Japan

Among swimmers born in Japan, Jay Litherland ranks 26Before him are Rie Kaneto (1988), Katsumi Nakamura (1994), Yukiko Inui (1990), Tomoru Honda (2001), Natsumi Hoshi (1990), and Ippei Watanabe (1997). After him are Masato Sakai (1995), Rikako Ikee (2000), Junya Koga (1987), Yasuhiro Koseki (1992), Kanako Watanabe (1996), and Naito Ehara (1993).