ATHLETE

Tsotne Rogava

1993 - Today

Photo of Tsotne Rogava

Icon of person Tsotne Rogava

Tsotne Badrievich Rogava (Ukrainian: Цотне Бадрієвич Рогава; born 2 May 1993) is a Ukrainian heavyweight Muay Thai kickboxer, fighting out of the Captain Odesa gym in Odesa. He is the current ACB Kickboxing Heavyweight champion and the 2012 Tatneft Arena World Cup winner. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Tsotne Rogava is the 7,462nd most popular athlete (up from 8,071st in 2019), the 423rd most popular biography from Georgia and the 28th most popular Georgian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Tsotne Rogava by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Tsotne Rogava ranks 7,462 out of 6,025Before him are Loïck Luypaert, Emin Jafarov, Márton Vámos, Karabo Sibanda, Alice Mangione, and Lorenzo Marsaglia. After him are Lucy Spoors, Henry Fieldman, Chiara Pellacani, Johan Mieses, Hamza Bouras, and Svetlana Gomboeva.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1993, Tsotne Rogava ranks 1,389Before him are Makoto Fukoin, Anna Karnaukh, Martin Boyle, Adam Gemili, Taiki Kato, and Masaya Yuma. After him are Ryuki Nishimuro, Naoki Tanaka, Shogo Tsukada, Alex Pritchard, Lynn Williams, and Kemar Roofe.

Others Born in 1993

Go to all Rankings

In Georgia

Among people born in Georgia, Tsotne Rogava ranks 423 out of 406Before him are Giorgi Arabidze (1998), Mikheil Kajaia (null), Ramaz Zoidze (1996), Robert Kobliashvili (1993), Sopiko Guramishvili (1991), and Gabriel Sigua (2005). After him are Andrés Mata (null), Sakhil Alakhverdovi (1999), Shota Mishvelidze (1994), Zakir Safiullin (1986), Bachana Khorava (1993), and Beka Kandelaki (1995).

Among ATHLETES In Georgia

Among athletes born in Georgia, Tsotne Rogava ranks 28Before him are Gogita Arkania (1984), Joachim Hansen (null), Aik Mnatsakanian (1995), Mikheil Kajaia (null), Ramaz Zoidze (1996), and Robert Kobliashvili (1993). After him are Andrés Mata (null), Sakhil Alakhverdovi (1999), Shota Mishvelidze (1994), Zakir Safiullin (1986), Bachana Khorava (1993), and Beka Kandelaki (1995).