SWIMMER

Leonardo de Deus

1991 - Today

Photo of Leonardo de Deus

Icon of person Leonardo de Deus

Leonardo Gomes de Deus (born 18 January 1991) is a Brazilian swimmer. In the 200 metre butterfly, he was 6th place at the 2020 Tokyo Games; twice a finalist in World Championships; twice Pan-Pacific runner-up, and three-time Pan American Games champion. He is currently an athlete at Unisanta (Universidade Santa Cecília), sponsored by Mormaii, LD Sports, and CDE. He is also one of the representatives of the Aqua Centurions team in the International Swimming League. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 11 different languages on Wikipedia. Leonardo de Deus is the 836th most popular swimmer (down from 663rd in 2024), the 2,509th most popular biography from Brazil (down from 2,178th in 2019) and the 18th most popular Brazilian Swimmer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Leonardo de Deus by language

Loading...

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1991, Leonardo de Deus ranks 1,645Before him are Marcelo Vidal, Aaron Donald, Shungo Tamashiro, David Stockton, Taijiro Mori, and Saeed Al Mowalad. After him are Michelle Toro, Bárbara Timo, Jonathan Ligali, Masahiro Teraoka, Ryosuke Tone, and Chen Chien-an.

Others Born in 1991

Go to all Rankings

In Brazil

Among people born in Brazil, Leonardo de Deus ranks 2,514 out of 2,236Before him are Wanderson (1991), João Klauss (1997), Paulo Roberto Paula (1979), Tinga (1990), Lucas Mineiro (1996), Alex Martins Ferreira (1993), Uilson (1994), Taciana Cesar (1988), Henrique Avancini (1989), Augusto Akio (2000), and Talles Cunha (1989). After him are Andressa de Morais (1990).

Among SWIMMERS In Brazil

Among swimmers born in Brazil, Leonardo de Deus ranks 18Before him are Etiene Medeiros (1991), João Gomes Júnior (1986), Guilherme Guido (1987), Kaio de Almeida (1984), Fernando Scheffer (1998), and Larissa Oliveira (1993). After him are Luiz Altamir Melo (1996), Viviane Jungblut (1996), Pedro Spajari (1997), Haneen Ibrahim (2000), Giovanna Diamante (1997), and Breno Correia (1999).