FENCER

Liza Pusztai

2001 - Today

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Liza Pusztai (born 11 May 2001) is a Hungarian sabre fencer. She is a two-time world champion in the team sabre and a two-time European Championships silver and bronze medallist. Pusztai represented Hungary at the 2020 Summer Olympics and 2024 Summer Olympics. She is also a junior world champion and two-time Youth Olympics gold medalist, having won the girls' sabre event and the mixed team event at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 13 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 12 in 2024). Liza Pusztai is the 457th most popular fencer (down from 378th in 2024), the 1,187th most popular biography from Hungary (down from 1,110th in 2019) and the 51st most popular Hungarian Fencer.

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Among FENCERS

Among fencers, Liza Pusztai ranks 457 out of 349Before her are Do Gyeong-dong, Alexandre Bardenet, James Davis, Park Sang-won, Kamil Ibragimov, and Tim Morehouse. After her are Despina Georgiadou, Dmitry Zherebchenko, Jeon Ha-young, Kazuki Iimura, Martina Favaretto, and Cheung Siu Lun.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 2001, Liza Pusztai ranks 460Before her are Ed Oxenbould, Isabella Acres, Largie Ramazani, Daniel Wiffen, María Vicente, and Daiki Matsuoka. After her are Antonio Watson, James Gomez, Peter Pokorný, Yutaro Oda, Sora Shirai, and Kim Mi-rae.

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In Hungary

Among people born in Hungary, Liza Pusztai ranks 1,187 out of 1,077Before her are Alex Szőke (2000), Gergely Krausz (1993), Róbert Kasza (1986), Mátyás Pásztor (1987), Márton Vámos (1992), and Nándor Németh (1999). After her are Réka Pupp (1996), Tamás Tóth (1989), Dániel Angyal (1992), Luca Kozák (1996), Dávid Betlehem (2003), and Szofi Özbas (2001).

Among FENCERS In Hungary

Among fencers born in Hungary, Liza Pusztai ranks 51Before her are Anna Márton (1995), Máté Tamás Koch (1999), Tibor Andrásfi (1999), Eszter Muhari (2002), Dávid Nagy (1999), and Krisztián Rabb (2001). After her are Renáta Katona (1994), Flóra Pásztor (1998), Fanni Kreiss (1989), and Kata Kondricz (1998).