SKATER

Kanako Murakami

1994 - Today

Photo of Kanako Murakami

Icon of person Kanako Murakami

Kanako Murakami (村上 佳菜子, Murakami Kanako; born November 7, 1994) is a retired Japanese figure skater. She is the 2010–11 Grand Prix Final bronze medalist, 2014 Four Continents champion, 2010 World Junior champion, 2009–10 JGP Final champion, and a four-time Japanese national medalist (bronze in 2010, 2011; silver in 2012, 2013). Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 19 different languages on Wikipedia. Kanako Murakami is the 476th most popular skater (down from 412th in 2024), the 4,911th most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,487th in 2019) and the 28th most popular Japanese Skater.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Kanako Murakami by language

Loading...

Among SKATERS

Among skaters, Kanako Murakami ranks 476 out of 483Before her are Ksenia Stolbova, Li Jianrou, Kip Carpenter, Fedor Klimov, Kevin Reynolds, and Jason Brown. After her are Vanessa James, Anna Pogorilaya, Jan Smeekens, Wakaba Higuchi, Jennifer Rodriguez, and Adam Rippon.

Most Popular Skaters in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1994, Kanako Murakami ranks 916Before her are Algee Smith, Jason Osborne, Sven van Beek, Jason Brown, Nataliya Pryshchepa, and Ćamila Mičijević. After her are Federico Di Francesco, Takuya Kida, Mikhail Grigorenko, Maria Centracchio, Miriam Butkereit, and Mike Tobey.

Others Born in 1994

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Kanako Murakami ranks 4,924 out of 6,245Before her are Masashi Owada (1981), Shintaro Shimizu (1992), Yu Tokisaki (1979), Hana Takahashi (2000), Akira Akao (1988), and Tatsunori Arai (1983). After her are Kiyou Shimizu (1993), Shingo Tomita (1986), Yuji Ono (1992), Keisuke Endo (1989), Maharu Yoshimura (1993), and Shohei Shinzato (1988).

Among SKATERS In Japan

Among skaters born in Japan, Kanako Murakami ranks 28Before her are Akiko Suzuki (1985), Keiichiro Nagashima (1982), Nana Takagi (1992), Yuma Kagiyama (2003), Takahiko Kozuka (1989), and Yukari Nakano (1985). After her are Wakaba Higuchi (2001), Takafumi Nishitani (1979), Marin Honda (2001), Rika Kihira (2002), Satoko Miyahara (1998), and Ayano Sato (1996).