TABLE TENNIS PLAYER

Miu Hirano

2000 - Today

Photo of Miu Hirano

Icon of person Miu Hirano

Miu Hirano (平野 美宇, Hirano Miu) (born 14 April 2000) is a Japanese table tennis player. She won Women's World Cup in 2016 as the youngest ever winner. She won the women's singles at the 2017 Asian Table Tennis Championships by sweeping away three top Chinese players. She competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics, winning a silver medal in women's team event. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Miu Hirano is the 109th most popular table tennis player (up from 113th in 2019), the 4,567th most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,588th in 2019) and the 7th most popular Japanese Table Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Miu Hirano by language

Loading...

Among TABLE TENNIS PLAYERS

Among table tennis players, Miu Hirano ranks 109 out of 107Before her are Li Ching, Niu Jianfeng, Kim Song-i, Quadri Aruna, Sayaka Hirano, and Wang Manyu. After her are Daniel Habesohn, Maharu Yoshimura, Gustavo Tsuboi, Emmanuel Lebesson, Sharath Kamal, and Yu Mengyu.

Most Popular Table Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 2000, Miu Hirano ranks 310Before her are Matsuri Hino, Kevin Rodríguez, Gabriel Menino, S10, Jens Lurås Oftebro, and Marcus Holmgren Pedersen. After her are Nao Kusaka, Iliman Ndiaye, Robert S. McMillan, Boryana Kaleyn, Lamecha Girma, and Julia Grosso.

Others Born in 2000

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Miu Hirano ranks 4,580 out of 6,245Before her are Jun Ideguchi (1979), Hiroyuki Hayashi (1983), Kosuke Kikuchi (1985), Yusuke Tanaka (1986), Kazunari Hosaka (1983), and Yusuke Tanaka (1989). After her are Masato Sasaki (1992), Tetsuto Yamada (1992), Hiroshi Fukushima (1982), Takahiro Kunimoto (1997), Rie Kaneto (1988), and Takenori Hayashi (1980).

Among TABLE TENNIS PLAYERS In Japan

Among table tennis players born in Japan, Miu Hirano ranks 7Before her are Ai Fukuhara (1988), Jun Mizutani (1989), Mima Ito (2000), Kasumi Ishikawa (1993), Koki Niwa (1994), and Sayaka Hirano (1985). After her are Maharu Yoshimura (1993).