ATHLETE

Shaul Gordon

1994 - Today

Photo of Shaul Gordon

Icon of person Shaul Gordon

Shaul Gordon (Hebrew: שאול גורדון; born July 11, 1994) is an Israeli-Canadian fencer in the sabre discipline. Gordon has represented the country on the international stage since 2013 and has competed at two Olympic Games, three Pan American Games and eight World Fencing Championships. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 4 different languages on Wikipedia. Shaul Gordon is the 12,767th most popular athlete (down from 10,952nd in 2024), the 552nd most popular biography from Israel (down from 501st in 2019) and the 31st most popular Israeli Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Shaul Gordon by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Shaul Gordon ranks 12,767 out of 6,025Before him are Carina Wimmer, Kevon Williams, Faith Nathan, Nigel Ellis, Sierra Hyland, and Steffin McCarter. After him are Teddese Lemi, Jared Panchia, Emma Beiter Bomme, Michael Beckett, Arjun Lal Jat, and Lewis Holland.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1994, Shaul Gordon ranks 1,964Before him are Katie Mullan, John Porch, Brendan Hyland, Danny León, Takashi Yoshikawa, and Brook Robertson. After him are Gabrielle Smith, Stefan Hengst, Ahmed Ayash, Hiromasa Ochiai, Matthias Schwab, and Reginald Jagers III.

Others Born in 1994

Go to all Rankings

In Israel

Among people born in Israel, Shaul Gordon ranks 553 out of 466Before him are Ran Sagiv (1997), Shai Kakon (2002), Water polo at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Men's team rosters#South Africa (null), Daniel Rowden (1997), Gabriel Escobar (null), and Gabriel Santos (null). After him are Claudia Verdino (2001), Shlomo Lipetz (1979), Loo Phay Xing (1997), Alon Leichman (1989), Álvaro Sandoval (1990), and Tal Erel (1996).

Among ATHLETES In Israel

Among athletes born in Israel, Shaul Gordon ranks 32Before him are Ran Sagiv (1997), Shai Kakon (2002), Water polo at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Men's team rosters#South Africa (null), Daniel Rowden (1997), Gabriel Escobar (null), and Gabriel Santos (null). After him are Shlomo Lipetz (1979), Alon Leichman (1989), Tal Erel (1996), Álvaro Sandoval (1990), and Loo Phay Xing (1997).