BADMINTON PLAYER

Mizuki Fujii

1988 - Today

Photo of Mizuki Fujii

Icon of person Mizuki Fujii

Mizuki Fujii (藤井 瑞希, Fujii Mizuki; born 5 August 1988) is a badminton player from Ashikita, Kumamoto, Japan and plays for the Renesas badminton club. Mizuki Fujii concentrates on doubles badminton. Most of her success has come with women's doubles partner Reika Kakiiwa. Together they reached the final of the 2010 Korea Open Super Series, their first major final as a pair. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 18 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 17 in 2024). Mizuki Fujii is the 121st most popular badminton player (up from 127th in 2024), the 4,677th most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,884th in 2019) and the 13th most popular Japanese Badminton Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Mizuki Fujii by language

Loading...

Among BADMINTON PLAYERS

Among badminton players, Mizuki Fujii ranks 121 out of 117Before her are Nguyễn Tiến Minh, Ma Jin, Reika Kakiiwa, Sho Sasaki, Zhang Yawen, and Zhou Mi. After her are Jonatan Christie, Zheng Siwei, Goh Liu Ying, Lianne Tan, Wei Yili, and Pullela Gopichand.

Most Popular Badminton Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1988, Mizuki Fujii ranks 1,299Before her are Ramadan Darwish, Mitchell Watt, Isabel Kerschowski, Elvin Mammadov, Shun Nagasawa, and Stopira. After her are Naif Hazazi, Artur Noga, Stanislaw Drahun, Camilla Dalby, Kévin Monnet-Paquet, and Dimitris Siovas.

Others Born in 1988

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Mizuki Fujii ranks 4,690 out of 6,245Before her are Satoshi Shimizu (1986), Keisuke Ota (1979), Toshitaka Tsurumi (1986), Yasuhiro Tominaga (1980), Takumu Kawamura (1999), and Nikki Havenaar (1995). After her are Kazuto Tsuyuki (1984), Yuzo Wada (1980), Takuya Kokeguchi (1985), Daisuke Takahashi (1983), Takumi Watanabe (1982), and Hiroe Minagawa (1987).

Among BADMINTON PLAYERS In Japan

Among badminton players born in Japan, Mizuki Fujii ranks 13Before her are Yuta Watanabe (1997), Yuki Fukushima (1993), Nami Matsuyama (1998), Miyuki Maeda (1985), Reika Kakiiwa (1989), and Sho Sasaki (1982). After her are Hiroyuki Endo (1986), Arisa Higashino (1996), Mayu Matsumoto (1995), Sayaka Hirota (1994), Kodai Naraoka (2001), and Takeshi Kamura (1990).