SWIMMER

Luca Dotto

1990 - Today

Photo of Luca Dotto

Icon of person Luca Dotto

Luca Dotto (born 18 April 1990) is an Italian swimmer. He holds the Italian record in the 100 m freestyle with a time of 47.96 and was the first Italian to break 48 seconds. He also won the silver medal in the 50 m freestyle at the 2011 World Aquatics Championships in Shanghai. Dotto is an athlete of the Centro Sportivo Carabinieri. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Luca Dotto is the 558th most popular swimmer (up from 602nd in 2019), the 5,099th most popular biography from Italy (up from 5,183rd in 2019) and the 17th most popular Italian Swimmer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Luca Dotto by language

Loading...

Among SWIMMERS

Among swimmers, Luca Dotto ranks 558 out of 709Before him are Ariarne Titmus, Katie Hoff, Nathan Adrian, Cristina Teuscher, Libby Trickett, and Charlotte Bonnet. After him are Dinko Jukić, Garrett Weber-Gale, Lilly King, Kirill Prigoda, Guilherme Guido, and Alla Shishkina.

Most Popular Swimmers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1990, Luca Dotto ranks 1,206Before him are Sergei Plotnikov, Kevin Reynolds, Jessica Moore, Maren Morris, Enni Rukajärvi, and Germán Garmendia. After him are Daniela Druncea, Mari Molid, Lenur Temirov, Nemanja Kojić, Brett Dier, and Adel Mechaal.

Others Born in 1990

Go to all Rankings

In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Luca Dotto ranks 5,100 out of 5,161Before him are Luca Rigoni (1984), Marco Biagianti (1984), Cameron Smith (null), Francesco Lamon (1994), Martina Alzini (1997), and Marta Cavalli (1998). After him are Davide Faraoni (1991), Federico Di Francesco (1994), Niccolò Bonifazio (1993), Maria Centracchio (1994), Lorenzo Crisetig (1993), and Federico Bonazzoli (1997).

Among SWIMMERS In Italy

Among swimmers born in Italy, Luca Dotto ranks 17Before him are Alessia Filippi (1987), Rachele Bruni (1990), Nicolò Martinenghi (1999), Gabriele Detti (1994), Simona Quadarella (1998), and Ilaria Bianchi (1990). After him are Alessandro Miressi (1998), Piero Codia (1989), Lorenzo Zazzeri (1994), Federico Burdisso (2001), Manuel Frigo (1997), and Marco Orsi (1990).