WRESTLER

Yui Susaki

1999 - Today

Photo of Yui Susaki

Icon of person Yui Susaki

Yui Susaki (須崎 優衣, Susaki Yui; born 30 June 1999) is a Japanese freestyle wrestler. She won the gold medal in the women's 50 kg event at the 2020 Summer Olympics without conceding a single point to any opponent. In the 2024 Summer Olympics, she was defeated by Vinesh Phogat, her first ever loss in any international bout. She eventually won a bronze medal through the repechage bout. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 21 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 19 in 2024). Yui Susaki is the 1,067th most popular wrestler (down from 752nd in 2024), the 4,554th most popular biography from Japan (down from 2,949th in 2019) and the 79th most popular Japanese Wrestler.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Yui Susaki by language

Loading...

Among WRESTLERS

Among wrestlers, Yui Susaki ranks 1,067 out of 1,027Before her are Taryn Terrell, Sabah Shariati, Shamil Borchashvili, Mika Sugimoto, Gennadiy Laliyev, and Tiffany Stratton. After her are Valeriy Andriytsev, Shinobu Ota, Mike Knox, Walide Khyar, Molly Holly, and Shannon Moore.

Most Popular Wrestlers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1999, Yui Susaki ranks 401Before her are Nicolò Martinenghi, Mats Wieffer, Qin Haiyang, Nicolás Schiappacasse, Bendegúz Bolla, and Rojé Stona. After her are Arne Maier, Keisuke Osako, Dejan Joveljić, Joe Willock, Niki, and Janina Minge.

Others Born in 1999

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Yui Susaki ranks 4,567 out of 6,245Before her are Takuji Miyoshi (1978), Takumi Hashimoto (1989), Yuki Ishida (1980), Keita Isozaki (1980), Motoki Takagi (1980), and Shingo Honda (1987). After her are Ryosuke Nemoto (1980), Narumi Miura (1997), Kosuke Kitani (1978), Yuzo Minami (1983), Akira Oba (1976), and Shinobu Ota (1993).

Among WRESTLERS In Japan

Among wrestlers born in Japan, Yui Susaki ranks 78Before her are Maki Tsukada (1982), Yoshie Ueno (1983), Chizuru Arai (1993), Shori Hamada (1990), and Mika Sugimoto (1984). After her are Shinobu Ota (1993), Ryunosuke Haga (1991), Haruka Tachimoto (1990), Mayu Mukaida (1997), Masashi Nishiyama (1985), Hiroe Minagawa (1987), and Huh Mi-mi (2002).