WRESTLER

Roman Amoyan

1983 - Today

Photo of Roman Amoyan

Icon of person Roman Amoyan

Roman Amoyan (Armenian: Ռոման Ամոյան; born 3 September 1983) is an Armenian retired Greco-Roman wrestler of Kurdish descent. He is an Olympic bronze medalist, three-time World Championships medalist, and two-time European Champion. Amoyan received the Honored Master of Sports of Armenia title in 2009. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Roman Amoyan is the 632nd most popular wrestler (down from 523rd in 2019), the 120th most popular biography from Armenia (up from 122nd in 2019) and the 8th most popular Armenian Wrestler.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Roman Amoyan by language

Loading...

Among WRESTLERS

Among wrestlers, Roman Amoyan ranks 632 out of 1,027Before him are Yeldos Smetov, Soso Liparteliani, Layla El, Otis, Mojo Rawley, and Hassan Yazdani. After him are T. J. Perkins, Edith Bosch, Aydın Polatçı, Park Jang-soon, Kelly Kelly, and Guram Tushishvili.

Most Popular Wrestlers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Roman Amoyan ranks 580Before him are Gregory Smith, Máximo González, Hedvig Lindahl, Patrick Thoresen, César Arturo Ramos, and Jennifer Ketcham. After him are Évelyne Brochu, Daniel Kajmakoski, Igor Antón, Ismail Matar, Anita Görbicz, and Pantelis Kapetanos.

Others Born in 1983

Go to all Rankings

In Armenia

Among people born in Armenia, Roman Amoyan ranks 120 out of 163Before him are Armen Mkrtchyan (1973), Tigran Hamasyan (1987), Sargis Sargsian (1973), Mkhitar Manukyan (1973), Sergey Khachatryan (1985), and Sipan Shiraz (1967). After him are Hamlet Mkhitaryan (1973), Arsen Julfalakyan (1987), Sevak Khanagyan (1987), Vitaliy Rahimov (1984), Edgar Manucharyan (1987), and Hripsime Khurshudyan (1987).

Among WRESTLERS In Armenia

Among wrestlers born in Armenia, Roman Amoyan ranks 8Before him are Levon Julfalakyan (1964), Suren Nalbandyan (1956), Artur Aleksanyan (1991), Mnatsakan Iskandaryan (1967), Armen Mkrtchyan (1973), and Mkhitar Manukyan (1973). After him are Arsen Julfalakyan (1987), Armen Vardanyan (1982), Mihran Harutyunyan (1989), Ferdinand Karapetian (1992), and Vazgen Tevanyan (1999).