WRESTLER

Khasan Khalmurzaev

1993 - Today

Photo of Khasan Khalmurzaev

Icon of person Khasan Khalmurzaev

Khasan Magometovich Khalmurzaev (Russian: Хасан Магометович Халмурзаев; born 9 October 1993) is a Russian judoka. Khasan won the gold medal in the –81 kg event at the 2016 Summer Olympics. At the 2017 World Judo Championships, Khalmurzaev lost the fight to Alexander Wieczerzak in the semifinals, but won the third-place match against Otgonbaataryn Uuganbaatar. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 27 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 26 in 2024). Khasan Khalmurzaev is the 964th most popular wrestler (down from 745th in 2024), the 3,575th most popular biography from Russia (down from 3,289th in 2019) and the 60th most popular Russian Wrestler.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Khasan Khalmurzaev by language

Loading...

Among WRESTLERS

Among wrestlers, Khasan Khalmurzaev ranks 964 out of 1,027Before him are Jenny Fransson, Chris Candido, Christophe Guénot, Yelena Shalygina, Abraham Conyedo, and Chikara Tanabe. After him are Kanatbek Begaliev, Adam Cole, Iakob Kajaia, Johnny Gargano, Sun Yanan, and Carol Huynh.

Most Popular Wrestlers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1993, Khasan Khalmurzaev ranks 657Before him are Lukáš Masopust, Luca Aerni, Thomas Lam, Nobuharu Matsushita, Daniel Yule, and Abraham Conyedo. After him are Demi Schuurs, Arlen López, Markus Granlund, Sergey Karasev, Davit Khocholava, and Iakob Kajaia.

Others Born in 1993

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Khasan Khalmurzaev ranks 3,575 out of 3,761Before him are Evgeniya Rodina (1989), Yelena Shalygina (1986), Cathy Young (1963), Olga Fatkulina (1990), Ruslan Kurbanov (null), and Aleksei Ionov (1989). After him are Yevgeniya Medvedeva (1976), Aleksandr Yerokhin (1989), Olga Holtz (1973), Sergey Karasev (1993), Tatiana Kosintseva (1986), and Evgeny Tishchenko (1991).

Among WRESTLERS In Russia

Among wrestlers born in Russia, Khasan Khalmurzaev ranks 60Before him are Razambek Zhamalov (1998), Zelym Kotsoiev (1998), Chermen Valiev (1998), Soslan Tigiev (1983), Tamerlan Bashaev (1996), and Yelena Shalygina (1986). After him are Amiran Kardanov (1976), Gadzhimurad Rashidov (1995), Bakhtiyar Akhmedov (1987), Albert Saritov (1985), Varteres Samurgashev (1976), and Marid Mutalimov (1980).