SWIMMER

Čaba Silađi

1990 - Today

Photo of Čaba Silađi

Icon of person Čaba Silađi

Čaba Silađi (Hungarian: Szilágyi Csaba, Serbian Cyrillic: Чаба Силађи; born 23 August 1990) is a Serbian swimmer of Hungarian ethnicity. Silađi mainly competes in the breaststroke. Silađi's hometown Senta is a centre of Hungarians in Vojvodina, though competing for Serbia, Silađi goes by the Serbian form of his name. His name also appears transliterated as Caba Siladji in English sports sources. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Čaba Silađi is the 724th most popular swimmer (down from 614th in 2019), the 673rd most popular biography from Serbia (down from 663rd in 2019) and the 4th most popular Serbian Swimmer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Čaba Silađi by language

Loading...

Among SWIMMERS

Among swimmers, Čaba Silađi ranks 724 out of 709Before him are Leonardo de Deus, Theodora Drakou, Alberto Razzetti, Tes Schouten, Ilya Kharun, and Emily Seebohm. After him are Evangelia Platanioti, Nic Fink, Sophie Hansson, Martina Carraro, Alisa Ozhogina, and Yakov Toumarkin.

Most Popular Swimmers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1990, Čaba Silađi ranks 1,583Before him are Nozomi Osako, Kosei Ishigami, Gerek Meinhardt, Christina Ackermann, Yutaro Hara, and Shusaku Tokita. After him are Melissa Tapper, Evan Dunfee, Rossella Gregorio, Doug Brochu, Yuji Senuma, and JaMychal Green.

Others Born in 1990

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Čaba Silađi ranks 673 out of 661Before him are Dejan Majstorović (1988), Mate Nemeš (1993), Nikola Jakšić (1997), Dragana Tomašević (1982), Nikola Radičević (1994), and Nikola Dedović (1992). After him are Strahinja Rašović (1992), Téa Obreht (1985), Filip Stevanović (2002), Armin Sinančević (1996), Miloš Vasić (1991), and Dejan Dražić (1995).

Among SWIMMERS In Serbia

Among swimmers born in Serbia, Čaba Silađi ranks 4Before him are László Szabados (1911), Mirna Jukić (1986), and Nađa Higl (1987). After him are Anja Crevar (2000), Andrej Barna (1998), Vuk Čelić (1996), and Nikola Aćin (1979).