ATHLETE

Milica Mandić

1991 - Today

Photo of Milica Mandić

Icon of person Milica Mandić

Milica Mandić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милица Мандић, born 6 December 1991) is a Serbian retired taekwondo athlete. She is a two-time Olympic champion in the Women's +67 kg category, having won gold medals at the 2012 and 2020 Summer Olympics. She was also the 2017 world champion in the 73 kg category. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 32 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 31 in 2024). Milica Mandić is the 3,691st most popular athlete (down from 3,618th in 2024), the 498th most popular biography from Serbia (up from 507th in 2019) and the 13th most popular Serbian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Milica Mandić by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Milica Mandić ranks 3,696 out of 6,025Before her are Charles Kamathi, Odalis Revé, Elisa Uga, Troy Douglas, Sevdalin Marinov, Roman Hagara, Danny Everett, Zita-Eva Funkenhauser, Markus Prock, Murielle Ahouré, and Juri Kashkarov. After her are Sylvain Guillaume.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1991, Milica Mandić ranks 381Before her are Christian Kabasele, Deniz Baysal, Zabit Magomedsharipov, G.E.M., Atsuko Maeda, and Hoya. After her are Kim Jin-woo, Mitchel Musso, Jean Michaël Seri, Eren Albayrak, Tomomi Itano, and Hilal Altınbilek.

Others Born in 1991

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Milica Mandić ranks 498 out of 661Before her are Sanja Vučić (1993), Tijana Bogićević (1981), Nenad Milijaš (1983), Siniša Mali (1972), Bojana Radulović (1973), and Ivica Iliev (1979). After her are Bojan Šaranov (1987), Nenad Tomović (1987), Milos Kerkez (2003), Nemanja Nedović (1991), Marko Podraščanin (1987), and Uroš Spajić (1993).

Among ATHLETES In Serbia

Among athletes born in Serbia, Milica Mandić ranks 13Before her are Thủy Nguyên district (null), Dragutin Topić (1971), Slavko Obadov (1948), Ivana Španović (1990), Igor Milanović (1965), and Aleksandar Šoštar (1964). After her are Natasa Dusev-Janics (1982), Dejan Savić (1975), Slobodan Soro (1978), Olivera Jevtić (1977), Milan Aleksić (1986), and Snežana Pajkić (1970).