SWIMMER

Katsumi Nakamura

1994 - Today

Photo of Katsumi Nakamura

Icon of person Katsumi Nakamura

Katsumi Nakamura (中村 克, Nakamura Katsumi; born 21 February 1994) is a Japanese swimmer. He competed in the men's 4 × 100 metre freestyle relay event at the 2016 Summer Olympics. He qualified to represent Japan at the 2020 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 13 different languages on Wikipedia. Katsumi Nakamura is the 615th most popular swimmer (down from 528th in 2024), the 4,858th most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,781st in 2019) and the 28th most popular Japanese Swimmer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Katsumi Nakamura by language

Loading...

Among SWIMMERS

Among swimmers, Katsumi Nakamura ranks 615 out of 709Before him are Rie Kaneto, Eric Namesnik, Paweł Korzeniowski, Ryan Murphy, Daniela Götz, and Yevgeny Lagunov. After him are Ilaria Bianchi, Liu Ou, Hannah Stockbauer, Yukiko Inui, Michael Klim, and Ariarne Titmus.

Most Popular Swimmers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1994, Katsumi Nakamura ranks 891Before him are Mashu Baker, Nans Peters, Risako Kawai, Tereza Smitková, Zelimkhan Khadjiev, and Saba Lobzhanidze. After him are Kwasi Okyere Wriedt, Odd Christian Eiking, Morgan Saylor, Marit Røsberg Jacobsen, Kedar Williams-Stirling, and Boban Nikolov.

Others Born in 1994

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Katsumi Nakamura ranks 4,870 out of 6,245Before him are Kazuto Kushida (1987), Takuya Muro (1982), Shosuke Katayama (1983), Kazuma Ikarino (1986), and Kenta Tokushige (1984). After him are Yasuhiro Hiraoka (1986), Mao Hosoya (2001), Kiyohiro Hirabayashi (1984), Funa Tonaki (1995), Ken Matsubara (1993), Hiroki Mihara (1978), and Toshiyuki Takagi (1991).

Among SWIMMERS In Japan

Among swimmers born in Japan, Katsumi Nakamura ranks 28Before him are Satomi Suzuki (1991), Takuro Fujii (1985), Raika Fujii (1974), Yui Ohashi (1995), Aya Terakawa (1984), and Rie Kaneto (1988). After him are Yukiko Inui (1990), Tomoru Honda (2001), Juri Tatsumi (1979), Saho Harada (1982), Natsumi Hoshi (1990), and Ippei Watanabe (1997).