ATHLETE

Shmagi Bolkvadze

1994 - Today

Photo of Shmagi Bolkvadze

Icon of person Shmagi Bolkvadze

Shmagi Bolkvadze (Georgian: შმაგი ბოლქვაძე; born July 26, 1994) is a Greco-Roman wrestler from Georgia. In 2016 he won bronze medals at the European championships and Rio Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Shmagi Bolkvadze is the 5,493rd most popular athlete (up from 5,741st in 2019), the 393rd most popular biography from Georgia (up from 402nd in 2019) and the 19th most popular Georgian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Shmagi Bolkvadze by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Shmagi Bolkvadze ranks 5,493 out of 6,025Before him are Erika Brown, Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal, Liliana Fernández, Daniel Böhm, Delfina Merino, and Kemar Bailey-Cole. After him are Josip Vrlić, Kim Jang-mi, Nina Kennedy, Beat Mändli, Meliha İsmailoğlu, and Oleh Omelchuk.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1994, Shmagi Bolkvadze ranks 774Before him are Olli Määttä, Rafidine Abdullah, Aimé De Gendt, Iryna Kurachkina, Sauli Väisänen, and Robert Piris Da Motta. After him are Anderson Esiti, Ysaline Bonaventure, Didier Ndong, Petr Ševčík, Halimah Nakaayi, and Kim Boutin.

Others Born in 1994

Go to all Rankings

In Georgia

Among people born in Georgia, Shmagi Bolkvadze ranks 393 out of 406Before him are Irakli Turmanidze (1984), Valerian Gvilia (1994), Giorgi Aburjania (1995), Ushangi Kokauri (1992), Salome Melia (1987), and Murtaz Daushvili (1989). After him are Dato Marsagishvili (1991), Yana Egorian (1993), Vladimir Boisa (1981), Sandro Bazadze (1993), Zurabi Iakobishvili (1992), and Goga Bitadze (1999).

Among ATHLETES In Georgia

Among athletes born in Georgia, Shmagi Bolkvadze ranks 19Before him are Giorgi Asanidze (1975), Zabit Samedov (1984), Ramaz Paliani (1973), Hanna Melnychenko (1983), Khatuna Lorig (1974), and Irakli Turmanidze (1984). After him are Avtandil Kentchadze (1995), Luka Maisuradze (1998), Gogita Arkania (1984), Joachim Hansen (null), Aik Mnatsakanian (1995), and Mikheil Kajaia (null).