SKATER

Nobunari Oda

1987 - Today

Photo of Nobunari Oda

Icon of person Nobunari Oda

Nobunari Oda (織田 信成, Oda Nobunari; born March 25, 1987) is a retired Japanese competitive figure skater. He is the 2006 Four Continents champion, a four-time Grand Prix Final medalist (silver in 2009 and 2010; bronze in 2006 and 2013), the 2005 World Junior champion and the 2008 Japanese national champion. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Nobunari Oda is the 300th most popular skater (down from 295th in 2019), the 3,261st most popular biography from Japan (down from 2,567th in 2019) and the 10th most popular Japanese Skater.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Nobunari Oda by language

Loading...

Among SKATERS

Among skaters, Nobunari Oda ranks 300 out of 483Before him are Loena Hendrickx, Kristina Groves, Tanja Szewczenko, Gianni Romme, Lee Kang-seok, and Derek Parra. After him are Kaori Sakamoto, Falko Zandstra, Daisuke Takahashi, Marc Gagnon, Evan Lysacek, and Wang Beixing.

Most Popular Skaters in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1987, Nobunari Oda ranks 675Before him are Andrea Lekić, Sarah Al Amiri, Robbie Grabarz, Evgeny Tomashevsky, Amelia Andersdotter, and Arnd Peiffer. After him are Shuko Aoyama, Robert Farah, Giedrius Arlauskis, José Luis Morales, Caroline Trentini, and Nozomi Tsuji.

Others Born in 1987

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Nobunari Oda ranks 3,268 out of 6,245Before him are Kensho Ono (1989), Kensuke Kagami (1974), Ryo Sakai (1977), Daiki Ito (1985), Miho Manya (1996), and Yuji Ito (1965). After him are Hana Kimura (1997), Shuko Aoyama (1987), Yoshimasa Suda (1967), Yoshiaki Maruyama (1974), Nobuo Kawaguchi (1975), and Taijiro Kurita (1975).

Among SKATERS In Japan

Among skaters born in Japan, Nobunari Oda ranks 10Before him are Mao Asada (1990), Yuko Kavaguti (1981), Yuka Sato (1973), Akira Kuroiwa (1961), Miki Ando (1987), and Hiroyasu Shimizu (1974). After him are Kaori Sakamoto (2000), Daisuke Takahashi (1986), Fumie Suguri (1980), Tomomi Okazaki (1971), Nao Kodaira (1986), and Masako Hozumi (1986).