List of Jews in sports
This list of Jewish athletes in sports contains athletes who are Jewish and have attained outstanding achievements in sports. The topic of Jewish participation in sports is discussed extensively in academic and popular literature.
Some Jewish people immigrated from the countries where they lived. Some made Aliyah to the State of Israel, while others moved elsewhere.
The criteria for inclusion in this list are:
- 1–3 places winners at major international tournaments;
- For team sports, winning in preliminary competitions of finals at major international tournaments, or playing for several seasons for clubs of major national leagues; or
- Holders of past and current world records.
To be included in the list, one does not necessarily have to practice Judaism. Some members of the list may practice another faith or not at all; although they do have to be of either ethnic Jewish descent or other Judaism-related background.
American football
- Sid Abramowitz, US, OT
- Erik Affholter, US, WR, set national field goal record
- Doc Alexander, US, G, 2× All-Pro
- Lyle Alzado, US, DE, 2× All-Pro
- Harris Barton, US, OT, 2× All-Pro
- Alan Bersin, US, defensive lineman, offensive guard, and linebacker, Harvard, First Team All-Ivy League, All-New England, and All-East.
- David Binn, US, LS, All-Pro
- Arthur Bluethenthal, US, C
- Greg Camarillo, US, WR
- Noah Cantor, Canada, DT, 2x Canadian Football League All Star
- Gabe Carimi, US, OT, All-American and Outland Trophy
- Jake Curhan, US, OT
- Jordan Dangerfield, US, SS
- JT Daniels, US, QB, Gatorade Player of the Year
- Brian de la Puente, US, C
- A. J. Dillon, US, RB
- Michael Dunn, US, G
- Nate Ebner, US, DB
- Brad Edelman, US, OG, 1× Pro Bowl
- Julian Edelman, US, WR, MVP in Super Bowl LIII
- Jay Fiedler, US, QB
- Anthony Firkser, US, TE
- John Frank, US, TE
- Benny Friedman, US, QB & halfback, 4× All-Pro, Pro Football Hall of Fame, College Football Hall of Fame
- Lennie Friedman, US, G
- Steve Furness, US, DL
- Antonio Garay, US, DT
- Sid Gillman, US, End and coach, Pro Football Hall of Fame, College Football Hall of Fame
- Adam Goldberg, US, OL
- Bill Goldberg, US, DT; professional wrestler
- Marshall “Biggie” Goldberg, US, RB, All-Pro, College Football Hall of Fame
- Charles "Buckets" Goldenberg, US, G & RB, All-Pro
- Lou Gordon, US, OL
- Randy Grossman, US, TE
- Arnold Horween, US, halfback, fullback, center, and blocking back, Harvard All-American, and NFL player
- Ralph Horween, US, fullback, halfback, punter, and drop-kicker, Harvard All-American and NFL player
- Greg Joseph, South African, kicker
- Sonny Karnofsky, US, HB
- Perry Klein, US, QB
- Kyle Kosier, US, OL
- Mort Landsberg, US, HB
- Len “Butch” Levy, US, G
- Erik Lorig, US, FB
- Sid Luckman, US, QB, 8× All-Pro, MVP, Pro Football Hall of Fame, College Football Hall of Fame
- Joe Magidsohn, Russia, Halfback
- Ali Marpet, US, G
- Taylor Mays, US, S
- Sam McCullum, US, WR
- Josh Miller, US, P
- Wayne Millner, US, E, DE, Pro Football Hall of Fame, College Football Hall of Fame
- Ron Mix, US, OT, 9× All-Pro, Pro Football Hall of Fame
- Ed Newman, US, G, All-Pro, College Football Hall of Fame, NFL passing yards and touchdowns leader
- Harry Newman, US, QB, All-Pro
- Brent Novoselsky, US, TE
- Igor Olshansky, Ukraine, DE
- Adam Podlesh, US, P
- Merv Pregulman, US, T & C, College Football Hall of Fame
- Jake Retzlaff, US, QB
- Josh Rosen, US, QB
- Sage Rosenfels, US, QB
- Mike Rosenthal, US, T
- Sam Salz US, receiver, Texas A & M; rare Orthodox Jewish player in Division 1 college football
- Adam Schreiber, US, C/LS
- Geoff Schwartz, US, OT
- Mitchell Schwartz, US, OT, All-Pro
- Mike Seidman, US, TE
- Allie Sherman, US, running back, QB & coach
- Steve Shull, US, LB
- Scott Slutzker, US, TE
- Ariel Solomon, US, OL
- Bob Stein, US, LB
- Paul “Twister” Steinberg, US, FB/HB
- Michael Stromberg, US, LB
- Rich Stotter, US, LB
- Terrell Suggs, US, DE, All-Pro, NFL Defensive Player of the Year
- Steve Tannen, US, CB
- Joseph Taussig, Germany-born US, QB
- Andre Tippett, US, LB, 2× All-Pro, NFL co-Defensive Player of the Year, Pro Football Hall of Fame, College Football Hall of Fame
- Alan Veingrad, US, OL
- Izzy Weinstock, US, FB
- Gary Wood, US, QB
- Sid Youngelman, US, OT
Association football (soccer)
- Liel Abada, Israel, forward
- Ryan Adeleye, US/Israel, defender
- Jeff Agoos, US, defender
- Yari Allnut, US, midfielder
- Hennadiy Altman, Ukraine, goalkeeper
- Kyle Altman, US, defender
- Dudu Aouate, Israel, goalkeeper
- Gary Assous, France/Israel, midfielder
- Jonathan Assous, France/Israel, defensive midfielder
- Gai Assulin, Israel, winger/attacking midfielder
- Yael Averbuch, US National Team, midfielder
- Finn Azaz, Ireland national team and Middlesbrough.
- Pini Balili, Israel, striker
- Tal Banin, Israel, midfielder, national team, manager
- Tai Baribo, Israel, forward
- Orr Barouch, Israel, striker
- David Beckham, UK, midfielder, English Football Hall of Fame, Premier League Hall of Fame
- Kyle Beckerman, US, midfielder
- David "Dedi" Ben Dayan, Israel, left defender
- Tal Ben Haim, Israel, center back/right back
- Arik Benado, Israel, defender
- Yossi Benayoun, Israel, attacking midfielder
- Eyal Berkovic, Israel, midfielder
- Rhett Bernstein, US, defender
- Steve Birnbaum, US, defender
- Gyula Bíró, Hungary, midfielder/forward
- Nir Bitton, Israel, defender/midfielder
- Nick Blackman, England/Barbados/Israel, striker
- Jean Bloch, France, Olympic silver
- Harald Bohr, Denmark, Olympic silver
- Noam Bonnet, France, midfielder
- Louis Bookman, Lithuanian-born Ireland, forward
- Jonathan Bornstein, US/Israel, left back/midfielder
- David Boysen, Denmark/Israel, left winger
- Daniel Brailovski, Argentina/Uruguay, midfielder
- Adam Braz, Canada, defender
- Ashley Brown, Australia, football player Melbourne Victory
- Jordan Brown, Australia, midfielder
- Tomer Chencinski, Israel/Canada, goalkeeper
- Jordan Cila, US, forward
- Avi Cohen, Israel, defender
- Martin Cohen, South Africa, midfielder
- Steven Cohen, France-Israel, midfielder
- Tamir Cohen, Israel, midfielder
- Yonatan Cohen, Israel, attacking midfielder/forward
- Edgar Davids, Netherlands, midfielder
- Rolf Decker, Germany-born US, midfielder
- Micky Dulin, England
- Daniel Edelman, US, midfielder
- Yaniv Edery, France/Morocco, defender
- Ernő Egri Erbstein, Hungary, midfielder
- Yakov Ehrlich, Russia, striker
- Sol Eisner, US, forward
- Ilay Elmkies, Israel, midfielder
- Benny Feilhaber, Brazil/US, center/attacking midfielder
- Ilay Feingold, Israel, right-back/centre-back
- Lajos Fischer, Hungary, goalkeeper, national team player
- Otto Fischer, Austria, national team player and coach
- Gottfried Fuchs, Germany/Canada
- Dean Furman, South Africa, midfielder
- Peter Fuzes, Australia, goalkeeper
- Sándor Geller, Hungary, goalkeeper, Olympic champion
- Mikhail Gershkovich, URS, forward, Europe U-19 Champion
- Ludwik Gintel, Poland, defender and forward
- Jake Girdwood-Reich, Australia, defensive midfielder/central defender
- Jordan Gruber, US, striker
- Andy Gruenebaum, US, goalkeeper
- Béla Guttmann, Hungary, midfielder, national team player & international coach
- Rudy Haddad, France/Israel, midfielder
- Eddy Hamel, US, right winger
- Tomer Hemed, Israel, forward
- Julius Hirsch, Germany, winger,
- Ya'akov Hodorov, Israel, goalkeeper
- Rinus Israel, Netherlands, defender
- Joe Jacobson, Wales, left back
- Tvrtko Kale, Croatia/Israel, goalkeeper
- Viktor Kanevskyi, URS, striker & manager
- Tal Karp, Australia, midfielder
- Scott Kashket, England, striker
- Yaniv Katan, Israel, forward/winger
- Josh Kennet, England/Israel, midfielder/right back
- Gyula Kertész, Hungary, winger, player & manager
- Vilmos Kertész, Hungary, winger, 47 national team caps
- Józef Klotz, Poland, national team; killed by the Nazis
- Konstantin Krizhevsky, URS/Russia, defender
- Mark Lazarus, England, right winger
- Jonathan Levin, Mexico, midfielder
- Lucas Matías Licht, Argentina, left defender/left winger
- Marcelo Lipatin, Uruguay, forward
- Józef Lustgarten, Poland
- Zac MacMath, US, goalkeeper
- Mickaël Madar, France, striker
- Melissa Maizels, Australia, goalkeeper
- Gyula Mándi, Hungary, half back
- Ofir Marciano, Israel, goalkeeper
- Shep Messing, US, goalkeeper, manager, and sportscaster
- Federico Mociulsky, Argentina, midfielder
- Bennie Muller, Netherlands, midfielder
- Andriy Oberemko, Ukraine, midfielder
- Eli Ohana, Israel, won UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and Bravo Award ; national team; manager
- Árpád Orbán, Hungary, Olympic champion
- Sid O'Linn, South Africa and Charlton Athletic
- Kevin Parienté, France, striker
- José Pékerman, Argentina, midfielder, former player, current coach and manager
- Dor Peretz, Israel, defensive midfielder
- Zach Pfeffer, US, midfielder
- Suf Podgoreanu, Israel, forward
- Roni Porokara, Finland, winger
- Boris Razinsky, URS/Russia, goalkeeper/striker, Olympic champion, manager
- Charlie Reiter, US, forward
- Haim Revivo, Israel, attacking/side midfielder
- Daniël de Ridder, Netherlands, forward winger/attacking midfielder
- Johnny Roeg, Netherlands, striker
- Ronnie Rosenthal, Israel, left winger/striker
- Moshe Romano, Israel, striker
- Sebastián Rozental, Chile, forward
- Patricio Sayegh, Argentina, striker
- David Schipper, US, midfielder/fullback
- Aaron Schoenfeld, US/Israel, forward
- Ronnie Schwartz, Denmark, striker
- Alex Scott , England, right-back, 140 caps, 5 caps
- Jordan Sebban, France, midfielder
- Béla Sebestyén, Hungary, winger
- Barry Silkman, England, midfielder
- Manor Solomon, Israel, winger/attacking midfielder
- Juan Pablo Sorín, Argentina, defender
- Jonathan Spector, US, defender
- Leon Sperling, Poland, left wing
- Giora Spiegel, Israel, midfielder
- Mordechai Spiegler, URS/Israel, striker, manager
- Daniel Steres, US, defender
- Sjaak Swart, Netherlands, winger
- Jordan Swibel, Australia, forward
- Idan Tal, Israel, midfielder
- Nicolás Tauber, Argentina/Israel, goalkeeper
- Dor Turgeman, Israel, forward
- Matt Turner, US, goalkeeper
- Joris van Overeem, Netherlands/Israel, midfielder
- Yochanan Vollach, Israel, defender
- Shon Weissman, Israel, forward
- Sara Whalen, US, defender/forward, Olympic silver
- DeAndre Yedlin, US, defender/midfielder
- Eran Zahavi, Israel, forward
Australian rules football
- Keith Baskin, AFL footballer
- Mordy Bromberg, Australia, AFL footballer
- Todd Goldstein, AFL footballer
- Alby Herman, VFL footballer
- Chris Judd, AFL footballer
- Julian Kirzner, AFL footballer
- Trevor Korn, VFL footballer
- Barney Lazarus
- Ezra Poyas, AFL and VFL footballer
- Bert Rapiport
- Harry Sheezel, AFL footballer
- Ian Synman, AFL footballer, only Jew to play in a Premiership
- Michael Zemski, Australia, AFL footballer
Baseball
- Cal Abrams, US, outfielder
- Rubén Amaro, Jr., US, outfielder, general manager, first base coach
- Morrie "Snooker" Arnovich, US, outfielder, All-Star Game|All-Star]
- Brad Ausmus, US, catcher, All-Star, 3× Gold Glove, manager
- Harrison Bader, US, center fielder, Gold Glove
- José Bautista, Dominican-born, pitcher
- Robert "Bo" Belinsky, US, pitcher, no-hit game
- Moe Berg, US, catcher, and spy for US in World War II
- Jake Bird, US, pitcher
- Richard Bleier, US, pitcher
- Ron "Boomer" Blomberg, US, DH/first baseman/outfielder, Major League Baseball's first designated hitter, Israel Baseball League manager
- Lou Boudreau, US, shortstop, 8× All-Star, batting title, MVP, Baseball Hall of Fame, manager
- Ralph "Hawk" Branca, US, pitcher, 3× All Star
- Ryan Braun, US, outfielder, 6× All-Star, home run champion, Rookie of the Year, 5× Silver Slugger, MVP
- Alex Bregman, US, infielder, 3× All Star, Silver Slugger
- Craig Breslow, US, relief pitcher
- Mark Clear, US, relief pitcher, 2× All-Star
- Andy Cohen, US, second baseman, coach
- Harry “the Horse” Danning, US, catcher, 4× All-Star
- Ike Davis, US, first baseman
- Cody Decker, US, first baseman
- Jonathan de Marte, US-Israel, pitcher
- Scott Effross, US, pitcher
- Harry Eisenstat, US, pitcher
- Mike "Superjew" Epstein, US, first baseman
- Harry Feldman, US, pitcher
- Scott Feldman, US, pitcher
- Gavin Fingleson, South African-born Australian, Olympic silver medalist
- Jake Fishman, US-Israeli, pitcher
- Nate Freiman, US, first baseman
- Max Fried, US, pitcher, 3× All Star, 3× Gold Glove, 2× Fielding Bible Award, Silver Slugger
- Sam Fuld, US, outfielder and general manager
- Zack Gelof, US, second baseman
- Brad Goldberg, US, pitcher
- Paul Goldschmidt, US, first baseman
- Jake Goodman, US, first baseman
- Colton Gordon, US, pitcher
- Sid Gordon, US, outfielder & third baseman, 2× All-Star
- John Grabow, US, relief pitcher
- Shawn Green, US, right fielder, 2× All-Star, Gold Glove, Silver Slugger
- Adam Greenberg, US, outfielder
- Hank "The Hebrew Hammer" Greenberg, US, first baseman & outfielder, 5× All-Star, 4× home run champion, 4× RBI leader, 2× MVP, Baseball Hall of Fame
- Dalton Guthrie, US, infielder and outfielder
- Jason Hirsh, US, pitcher
- Ken Holtzman, US, starting pitcher, 2× All-Star, 2 no-hitters, Israel Baseball League manager
- Spencer Horwitz, US, first baseman
- Joe Horlen, US, pitcher, All-Star, ERA leader, no-hitter
- Jake Kalish, US, pitcher
- Rob Kaminsky, US, pitcher
- Gabe Kapler, US, outfielder, manager, 2021 NL Manager of the Year
- Ty Kelly, US-Israeli, utility player
- Ian Kinsler, US-Israeli, second baseman, 4× All-Star, hit for the cycle, 2× 30–30 club, 2× Gold Glove, Fielding Bible Award
- Jason Kipnis, US, second baseman, 2x All-Star, Jewish ancestry, practicing Roman Catholic, self-identifies as Jewish
- Sandy Koufax, US, starting pitcher, 7× All-Star, 1 perfect game, 4 no-hitters, 3× Triple Crown, 5× ERA leader, 4× strikeouts leader, 3× Wins leader, 2× W-L% leader, 2× World Series MVP, 3× Cy Young Award, MVP, Baseball Hall of Fame
- Dean Kremer, US-Israeli, pitcher
- Barry Latman, US, pitcher, All-Star
- Ryan Lavarnway, US-Israeli, catcher
- Max Lazar, US, pitcher
- Alon Leichman, Israel, former pitcher, now Miami Marlins assistant pitching coach
- Al Levine, US, relief pitcher
- Mike Lieberthal, US, catcher, 2× All-Star, Gold Glove
- Shlomo Lipetz, Israel, pitcher
- Assaf Lowengart, Israel, outfielder
- Elliott Maddox, US, outfielder & third baseman
- Jason Marquis, US, starting pitcher, All-Star, Silver Slugger
- Erskine Mayer, US, pitcher
- Bob Melvin, US, catcher, manager
- Matt "Mash" Mervis, US, first baseman
- Eli Morgan, US, pitcher
- Jon Moscot, US-Israeli, pitcher
- Sam Nahem, US, pitcher
- Jeff Newman, US, catcher & first baseman, All-Star, manager
- Joc Pederson, US, outfielder, 2x All Star
- Barney "the Yiddish Curver" Pelty, US, pitcher
- Lefty Phillips, US; briefly a minor league pitcher in the 1930s, later became a pitching coach and manager.
- Lip "the Iron Batter" Pike, US, outfielder, second baseman, manager, 4× home run champion, RBI leader
- Kevin Pillar, US, outfielder
- Scott Radinsky, US, relief pitcher and coach
- Jimmie Reese, US, second baseman & third baseman
- Dave Roberts, US, pitcher
- Saul Rogovin, US, pitcher, ERA leader
- Al "Flip" Rosen, US, third baseman & first baseman, 4× All Star, 2× home run champion, 2× RBI leader, MVP
- Goody Rosen, Canada, outfielder, All-Star
- Kenny Rosenberg, US, pitcher
- Bubby Rossman, US-Israeli, pitcher
- Richie Scheinblum, US, outfielder, All-Star
- Scott Schoeneweis, US, pitcher
- Art Shamsky, US, outfielder & first baseman, Israel Baseball League manager
- Ryan Sherriff, US, pitcher
- Larry Sherry, US, relief pitcher, World Series MVP
- Norm Sherry, US, catcher, manager
- Jared Shuster, US, pitcher
- Mose "the Rabbi of Swat" Solomon, US, outfielder, set minor league home run record
- Robert Stock, US, pitcher
- Steve Stone, US, starting pitcher, All-Star, Wins leader, Cy Young Award
- CJ Stubbs, US, catcher
- Garrett Stubbs, US, catcher
- Rowdy Tellez, US, first baseman
- Danny Valencia, US-Israeli, third baseman
- Phil "Mickey" Weintraub, US, first baseman & outfielder
- Zack Weiss, US-Israeli, pitcher
- Steve Yeager, US, catcher, World Series MVP
- Andy Yerzy, Canada, catcher/first baseman
- Kevin Youkilis, US, first baseman, third baseman, & left fielder, 3× All-Star, Gold Glove, Hank Aaron Award
- Josh Zeid, US-Israeli, pitcher
Basketball
- Eli Abaev, US & Israel, 6' 8" forward/center
- Joe Alexander, US & Israel, 6' 8" forward
- Ben Auerbach, US, 6' 1" guard
- Red Auerbach, US, guard for George Washington University; US Basketball Hall of Fame-inducted coach of the Boston Celtics
- Deni Avdija, Israel, NBA 6' 9" power forward
- Amari Bailey, US, NBA 6' 5" shooting guard
- Sam Balter, US, 5' 10" guard, Olympic champion
- Miki Berkovich, Israel, 6' 4" shooting guard, Eurobasket MVP, 4x FIBA European All Star
- Sue Bird, US & Israel, WNBA 5' 9" point guard, 5x Olympic champion, 4x world champion, 13x All-Star
- David Blatt, US & Israel, Israeli Premier Basketball League 6' 3.5" point guard, coached Russia National Basketball Team, Israel's Maccabi Tel Aviv to EuroLeague Championship, EuroLeague Coach of the Year, 4× Super League Coach of the Year|Israeli League Coach of the Year], former head coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers, head coach of Turkish club Darussafaka
- Mike Bloom, US, NBA 6' 6" forward/center, ABA All-American
- David Blu, US & Israel, EuroLeague 6' 7" power forward
- Moysés Blás, Brazil, Olympics 5' 11" guard
- Frédéric Bourdillon, France & Israel, Israeli Basketball Premier League 6' 4" shooting guard
- Harry Boykoff, US, NBA 6' 10" center
- Tal Brody, US & Israel, EuroLeague 6' 2" shooting guard
- Larry Brown, US, ABA 5' 9" point guard, 3× ABA All-Star, 3× assists leader, List of [NCAA Division I men's basketball champions|NCAA National Championship] coach, NBA coach, Olympic champion, Basketball Hall of Fame
- Omri Casspi, Israel, NBA 6' 9" small forward, drafted in 1st round of 2009 NBA draft, for Memphis Grizzlies
- Steve Chubin, US, ABA 6' 3" guard
- Alex Chubrevich, Israel & Russia, Premier League 7' 0" center
- Alysha Clark, US-Israel, WNBA 5' 11" small forward
- Jeff Cohen, US, ABL 6' 7" power forward
- Shawn Dawson, Israel, 6' 6" small forward/shooting guard
- Shay Doron, Israel & US, WNBA 5' 9" guard
- Stu Douglass, US & Israel, 6' 3" shooting guard
- Lior Eliyahu, Israel, EuroLeague 6' 9" power forward, 2006 NBA draft, playing in the EuroCup
- Jordan Farmar, US, NBA 6' 2" point guard
- Marty Friedman, US, 5' 7" guard & coach, Hall of Fame
- Jack Garfinkel, US, NBA 6' 0" guard
- Tamir Goodman, US-Israel, 6' 3"
- Ernie Grunfeld, Romania-born US, NBA 6' 6" guard/forward & GM, Olympic champion
- Yotam Halperin, Israel, EuroLeague 6' 5" guard, drafted in 2006 NBA draft by Seattle SuperSonics
- Sonny Hertzberg, US, NBA 5' 9" point guard, original NY Knickerbocker
- Art Heyman, US, NBA 6' 5" forward/guard
- Nat Holman, US, ABL 5' 11" guard & coach, Hall of Fame
- Red Holzman, US, BAA & NBA 5' 10" guard, 2× All-Star, & NBA coach, NBA Coach of the Year, Hall of Fame
- Eban Hyams, India-Israel-Australia, Australian National Basketball League & Israeli Super League 6' 5" guard, first-ever Indian national to play in ULEB competitions
- Doron Jamchi, Israel, Israeli Basketball Premier League 6' 6" shooting guard/small forward
- Jacqui Kalin, US/Israel, Israel League 5' 8" point guard
- Oded Kattash, Israel, Premier League 6' 4" point guard & coach
- Barry Kramer, US, NBA, ABA 6' 4" forward
- Joel Kramer, US, NBA 6' 7" forward
- Dave Kufeld, US/Israel, 6' 8", first Orthodox Jew selected in the NBA draft
- Sylven Landesberg, US-Israel-Austria, EuroLeague 6' 6" former UVA shooting guard/small forward
- Rudy LaRusso, US, NBA 6' 7" forward/center, 5× All-Star
- Howard Lassoff, US/Israel, 6' 10" center, 6x Israeli Basketball League Champion with Maccabi Tel Aviv.
- Nancy Lieberman, US, WNBA 5' 10" point guard, general manager, & coach, Olympic silver, Hall of Fame
- Yam Madar, Israel, 6' 3" guard drafted by the NBA's Boston Celtics in 2020
- Jan Martín, Germany-Spain-Israel, 6' 8" center/forward
- Gal Mekel, Israel, 6' 3" point guard
- Irving Meretsky, Canada, Olympic silver medallist
- Abby Meyers, US, WNBA 6' 0" guard
- Yogev Ohayon, Israel, Super League 6' 2" point guard
- Bernard Opper, US, NBL & ABL 5' 10" guard, All-American at University of Kentucky
- Donna Orender, US, Women's Pro Basketball League 5' 7" point guard, All-Star, former WNBA president
- Josh Pastner, US, NCAA 6' 0" guard & coach
- Zack Rosen, US, Super League 6' 1" point guard
- Lennie Rosenbluth, US, NBA 6' 4" forward
- Domantas Sabonis, Lithuania & US, NBA 6' 10" center, 3× All-Star, 2× All-NBA, 2× league rebounding leader
- Ben Saraf, Israel, NBA 6’ 6” guard
- Avi Schafer, Japan, B.League, 6' 10" center
- Danny Schayes, US, NBA 6' 11" center/forward
- Dolph Schayes, US, NBA 6' 7" forward/center, 3× FT% leader, 1× rebound leader, 12× All-Star, Hall of Fame, & coach
- Ossie Schectman, US, NBA 6' 0" guard, scorer of first NBA basket
- Jon Scheyer, US, All-American, 6' 5" shooting guard & point guard, head coach Duke University
- Barney Sedran, US, Hudson River League & New York State League 5' 4" guard, Hall of Fame
- Ezequiel Skverer, Argentina & Israel, 5' 11" point guard
- Tiago Splitter, Brazil, NBA 6' 11" power forward/center
- Amar'e Stoudemire, US & Israel, NBA 6' 10" power forward/center, 6× NBA All-Star, NBA Rookie of the Year, 5× All-NBA Team
- Amit Tamir, Israel, Israel League 6' 10" power forward/center
- Sidney Tannenbaum, US, BAA 6' 0" guard, 2× All-American, left as NYU all-time scorer
- Alex Tyus, US & Israel, 6' 8" power forward/center
- Neal Walk, US, NBA 6' 10" center
- Spencer Weisz, US & Israel, Premier League 6' 4" shooting guard/small forward
- Jamila Wideman, US, WNBA 5' 6" guard
- Danny Wolf, Israel & US, NBA 6’ 11” center
- Max Zaslofsky, US, NBA 6' 2" guard/forward, 1× FT% leader, 1× points leader, All-Star, ABA coach
Bowling
- Barry Asher, US, 10 PBA titles, PBA Hall of Fame
- Guy Caminsky, South Africa
- Marshall Holman, US, 22 PBA titles ; PBA Hall of Fame
- Mark Roth, US, 34 PBA titles ; PBA Hall of Fame
Boxing
- Barney Aaron, English-born US lightweight, Hall of Fame
- Salamo Arouch, Greece & Israel, the Middleweight Champion of Greece 1938, and the All-Balkans Middleweight Champion 1939
- Abe Attell, US, world champion featherweight, 1906–12, Hall of Fame
- Monte Attell, US, bantamweight
- Max Baer, US, world heavyweight champion 1934–35, wore a Star of David on his trunks
- Benny Bass, US, world champion featherweight & world champion junior lightweight, 1927–29, Hall of Fame
- Fabrice Benichou, France, world champion super bantamweight 1989
- Jack Kid Berg, England, world champion lightweight 1930, wore a Star of David on his trunks, Hall of Fame
- Maxie Berger, Canada, flyweight, junior welterweight, and welterweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks
- Samuel Berger, US, Olympic champion heavyweight 1904
- Jack Bernstein, US, world champion junior lightweight 1923
- Nathan "Nat" Bor, US, Olympic bronze lightweight 1932
- Mushy Callahan, US, world champion light welterweight 1926-30
- Joe Choynski, US, heavyweight, Hall of Fame
- Robert Cohen, French & Algerian, world champion bantamweight 1954-56
- Al "Bummy" Davis, US, welterweight & lightweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks
- Louis "Red" Deutsch, US, heavyweight, later famous as the proprietor of the Tube Bar in Jersey City, New Jersey and inspiration for Moe Szyslak on The Simpsons
- Carolina Duer, Argentine, WBO world champion super flyweight 2010, and bantamweight 2013
- John "Jackie" Fields, US, world champion welterweight 1929 & Olympic champion featherweight 1924, Hall of Fame
- Hagar Finer, Israel, WIBF champion bantamweight 2009
- Nat Fleischer found of Ring Magazine. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of boxing.
- Yuri Foreman, Belarusian-born Israeli US middleweight and World Boxing Association champion super welterweight 2009
- Alexander Frenkel, undefeated cruiserweight who retired early.
- Bernie Friedkin, lightweight boxer who flourished in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
- György Gedó, Hungary, Olympic champion light flyweight 1972
- Abe Goldstein, US, world champion bantamweight 1924
- Ruby Goldstein, US, welterweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks
- Roman Greenberg, Israel, International Boxing Organization's Intercontinental champion heavyweight
- Stéphane Haccoun, France, featherweight, super featherweight, and junior lightweight
- Alphonse Halimi, France, world champion bantamweight 1957
- Harry Harris, US, world champion bantamweight 1901-02
- Abe "The Newsboy" Hollandersky, US, Panamanian heavyweight champion, American welterweight reputed to have fought 1,000 fights
- Gary Jacobs, Scottish, British, Commonwealth, and European champion welterweight
- Harry Isaacs, South Africa, Olympic bronze medalist 1928
- Pavlo Ishchenko, Ukraine/Israel, bantamweight & lightweight, 2× European Amateur Boxing Championships medalist, and European Games medalist
- Ben Jeby, US, world champion middleweight 1933
- Vitali Klitschko, Ukraine, heavyweight champion
- Wladimir Klitschko, Ukraine, heavyweight champion
- Julie Kogon, US, 1947 New England Lightweight Champion; Connecticut Boxing Hall of Fame
- Solly Krieger, US, world champion middleweight 1938-39
- Benny Leonard, US, world champion lightweight 1917–1925, Hall of Fame
- Battling Levinsky, US, world champion light heavyweight 1916–1920, Hall of Fame
- King Levinsky, US, heavyweight, also known as Kingfish Levinsky
- Harry Lewis, US, world champion welterweight 1908-11
- Ted "Kid" Lewis, England, world champion welterweight, Hall of Fame
- Sammy Luftspring, Canada, Canadian champion welterweight, Canada's Sports Hall of Fame
- Al McCoy, US, world champion middleweight 1914-17
- Saoul Mamby, US, WBC super lightweight champion,
- Daniel Mendoza, England, England Champion welterweight and heavyweight 1784–1795, Hall of Fame
- Michael Michaelsen, Denmark, Olympic bronze heavyweight 1928 and European Champion 1930
- Samuel Mosberg, US, Olympic champion lightweight 1920
- Bob Olin, US, world champion light heavyweight 1934-35
- Victor Perez, Tunisia, world champion flyweight 1931-32
- Harold Reitman, professional heavyweight, fought while working as surgeon, Golden Gloves champion
- Charlie Phil Rosenberg, US, world champion bantamweight 1925-27
- Dana Rosenblatt, US, world champion middleweight IBA 1999
- Maxie Rosenbloom, US, world champion light heavyweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks, Hall of Fame
- Barney Ross, US, world champion lightweight & junior welterweight, Hall of Fame
- Mike Rossman, US, world champion light heavyweight, wore Star of David on trunks
- Dmitry Salita, US, North American Boxing Association champion light welterweight
- Cletus Seldin, US, light welterweight, welterweight, WBC International Silver junior welterweight champion
- Szapsel Rotholc, Poland, flyweight
- Isadore "Corporal Izzy" Schwartz, US, world champion flyweight
- Abe Simon, US, Last Jewish fighter to fight for the heavyweight title
- Al Singer, US, world champion lightweight
- Bruce "The Mouse" Strauss, middleweight, only fighter to be knocked out on six continents
- "Lefty" Lew Tendler, US, bantamweight, lightweight, and welterweight; wore a Star of David on his trunks; Hall of Fame
- Sid Terris, US, lightweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks
- Matt Wells, England, lightweight champion of Great Britain and world champion welterweight
- Jack "Kid" Wolfe, Russian-born US, superbantumweight
- Victor Zilberman, Romania, welterweight, Olympic bronze medalist
Canoeing
- László Fábián, Hungary, sprint canoeist, Olympic champion, 4× world champion and one silver
- Imre Farkas, Hungary, sprint canoeist, 2× Olympic bronze
- Jessica Fox, French-born Australian, slalom canoeist, Olympic gold, Olympic silver and bronze, world championships gold
- Noemie Fox, French-born Australian, slalom canoeist, Olympic champion, 2x world champion
- Myriam Fox-Jerusalmi, France, slalom canoeist, Olympic bronze, 5 golds at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships
- Klára Fried-Bánfalvi, Hungary, sprint canoeist, Olympic bronze, world champion
- Leonid Geishtor, URS, sprint canoeist, Olympic champion
- Joe Jacobi, US, slalom canoeist, Olympic champion
- Michael Kolganov, URS -born Israeli, sprint canoeist, Olympic bronze for Israel; 2× world champion
- Anna Pfeffer, Hungary, sprint canoeist, Olympic 2× silver, bronze ; world champion, silver, 2× bronze
- Naum Prokupets, Moldovan/URS, sprint canoeist, Olympic bronze, gold at ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships
- Leon Rotman, Romanian, sprint canoeist, 2× Olympic champion and bronze, 14 national titles
- Shaun Rubenstein, South Africa, canoeist, World Marathon champion 2006
Cricket
- Ben Ashkenazi, Australia
- Ali Bacher, South Africa, batsman and administrator
- Mike Barnard, England, cricketer
- Ivan Barrow, West Indies, cricketer, only Jew to hit a test century.
- Mark Bott, England, cricketer
- Cecil Closenberg, South Africa, cricketer
- Stephen Eskinazi, England, cricketer
- Dennis Gamsy, South Africa, Test wicket-keeper
- Darren Gerard, England, cricketer
- Arthur Goldman, Australia, cricketer
- Norman Gordon, South Africa, fast bowler
- Steven Herzberg, English-born Australian, cricketer
- Sid Kiel, South Africa, opening batsman
- Michael Klinger, Australia, batsman
- Roy Levy, Australia, cricketer
- Leonard "Jock" Livingston, Australia, cricketer
- Bev Lyon, England, cricketer
- Dar Lyon, England, cricketer
- Greg, Jason, and Lara Molins, two brothers and a cousin from the same Irish family
- Jon Moss, Australia, allrounder
- Sid O'Linn, South Africa
- Ray Phillips, Australia, cricketer
- Terry Racionzer, Scotland, batsman
- John Raphael, England, batsman
- Marshall Rosen, NSW Australia, cricketer and selector
- Lawrence Seeff, South Africa, batsmen
- Maurice Sievers, Australia, lower order batsman and fast-medium bowler
- Bensiyon Songavkar, India, cricketer, MVP of 2009 Maccabiah Games cricket tournament
- Fred Susskind, South Africa, Test batsman
- Julien Wiener, Australia, Test cricketer
- Mandy Yachad, South Africa, Test cricketer
Curling
- Ron Braunstein, Canada, World Champion silver medal
- Terry Braunstein, Canada, World Champion silver medal
Cycling
- Garen Bloch, South Africa, Olympian
- Sean Bloch, South Africa, Olympian
- Mikhail Iakovlev, Russian-born Israeli, world record holder
- Romāns Vainšteins, Latvia, 2000 World Road Race Champion
- Tinus van Gelder, Netherlands, 1948 Olympian, Maccabiah Games representative
Equestrian
- Georgina Bloomberg, US, Pan-American bronze
- Robert Dover, US, 4× Olympic bronze, 1× world championship bronze
- Margie Goldstein-Engle, US, world championship silver, Pan American Games gold, silver, and bronze
- Hermann Mandl, Austria
- Edith Master, US, Olympic bronze
Fencing
- Henri Anspach, Belgium, Olympic champion
- Paul Anspach, Belgium, 2× Olympic champion
- Norman Armitage, US, Olympic bronze, 17× US champion
- Albert "Albie" Axelrod, US, Olympic bronze, 4× US champion
- Péter Bakonyi, Hungary, Olympic 3× bronze
- Tamir Bloom, US, 2× Pan-American silver
- Albert Bogen, Austria, Olympic silver
- Nick Bravin, US, 4x US champion, 3x NCAA champion
- Daniel Bukantz, US, 4× US champion
- Eli Dershwitz, US, world champion, junior world champion, 4× Pan-American champion, US champion, NCAA champion
- Yves Dreyfus, France, Olympic bronze, French champion
- Jacqueline Dubrovich, US, Olympic team champion
- Ilona Elek, Hungary, 2× Olympic champion
- Boaz Ellis, Israel, 3× NCAA champion, 5× Israeli champion
- Sándor Erdős, Hungary, Olympic champion
- Siegfried "Fritz" Flesch, Austria, Olympic bronze
- Dezső Földes, Hungary, 2× Olympic champion
- Yuval Freilich, Israel, 2014 and 2015 European Men's Épée Junior Champion, 2019 European Épée Champion, and the épée team silver medal with Israel at the 2022 European Fencing Championships
- Jenő Fuchs, Hungary, 4× Olympic champion
- Tamás Gábor, Hungary, Olympic champion
- János Garay, Hungary, Olympic champion, silver, bronze, killed by the Nazis
- Oskar Gerde, Hungary, 2× Olympic champion, killed by the Nazis
- Sándor Gombos, Hungary, Olympic champion
- Vadim Gutzeit, Ukraine, Olympic champion
- Johan Harmenberg, Sweden, Olympic champion
- Delila Hatuel, Israel, Olympian, ranked No. 9 in world in 2008
- Lydia Hatuel-Czuckermann, Israel, 20× Israeli champion
- Otto Herschmann, Austria, Olympic silver
- Nick Itkin, US, Olympic silver, 2x Olympic bronze, individual Pan American champion, 2x individual World Championship medalist
- Emily Jacobson, US, Junior World Champion, NCAA champion
- Sada Jacobson, US, ranked No. 1 in the world, Olympic silver, 2× bronze, 2× world team champion
- Allan Jay, UK, Olympic 2× silver, world champion
- Endre Kabos, Hungary, 3× Olympic champion, bronze
- Roman Kantor, Poland, Nordic champion & URS champion, killed by the Germans during World War II
- Byron Krieger, US, 2× Olympian, Pan American Games team gold/silver
- Grigory Kriss, URS, Olympic champion, 2× silver
- Allan Kwartler, US, 3× Pan American Games champion
- Alexandre Lippmann, France, 2× Olympic champion, 2× silver, bronze
- Helene Mayer, Germany & US, Olympic champion
- Maria Mazina, Russia, Olympic champion, bronze medalist
- Mark Midler, URS, 2× Olympic champion
- Noam Mills, Israel, female Junior World Champion
- Armand Mouyal, France, Olympic bronze, world champion
- Claude Netter, France, Olympic champion, silver
- Jacques Ochs, Belgium, Olympic champion
- Ayelet Ohayon, Israel, European champion
- Ellen Osiier, Denmark, Olympic champion
- Ivan Osiier, Denmark, Olympic silver, 25× Danish champion
- Attila Petschauer, Hungary, 2× team Olympic champion, silver, killed by the Nazis
- Ellen Preis, Austria, Olympic champion, 3× world champion, 17× Austrian champion
- Mark Rakita, URS, 2× Olympic champion, 2× silver
- Yakov Rylsky, URS, Olympic champion
- Gaston Salmon, Belgium, Olympic champion
- Zoltán Ozoray Schenker, Hungary, Olympic champion, silver, bronze
- Edgar Seligman, British, Olympic 2× silver, 2× British champion in each weapon
- Sergey Sharikov, Russia, 2× Olympic champion, silver, bronze
- Andre Spitzer, Israel, killed by terrorists
- Jean Stern, France, Olympic champion
- Elizabeth Tartakovsky, US, Olympian and Pan-American champion
- Soren Thompson, US, World Team Champion, US Junior Champion, US champion, NCAA champion
- David Tyshler, URS, Olympic bronze
- Ildikó Újlaky-Rejtő, Hungary, 2× Olympic champion
- Eduard Vinokurov, Russia, 2× Olympic champion, silver
- Iosif Vitebskiy, URS, Olympic silver, 10× national champion
- Maia Weintraub, US, Olympic team champion, 2x US national champion, 2022 NCAA Individual Foil Champion, 2021 Junior Team Silver, 2022 Junior Team Gold, 2023 Senior Team Silver, 3× gold 2019 European Maccabi Games
- Lajos Werkner, Hungary, 2× Olympic champion
- George Worth, US, Olympic bronze, US champion, 3× Pan American champion
Field hockey
- Carina Benninga, Netherlands, Olympic champion, bronze
- Giselle Kañevsky, Argentina, Olympic bronze
Figure skating
- Max Aaron, US, figure skater, 2013 US men's champion
- Sarah Abitbol, France, figure skater, World Figure Skating Championship bronze
- Benjamin Agosto, US, ice dancer, Olympic silver, world championship silver, bronze
- Ilya Averbukh, Russia, ice dancer, Olympic silver, world champion, European champion
- Oksana Baiul, Ukraine, figure skater, Olympic gold
- Jason Brown, US, figure skater, 2× Junior World Medalist, 2014 US silver, 2014 Olympic bronze
- Alexei Beletski, Ukrainian-born Israeli, ice dancer, Olympian
- Judy Blumberg, US, ice dancer, 3× World Championship bronze
- Aimee Buchanan, US & Israel, figure skater
- Cindy Bortz, US, figure skater, world junior champion
- Fritzi Burger, Austria, figure skater, 2× Olympic silver, 2× world championship silver
- Zhan Bush, Russia, figure skater
- Oleksii Bychenko, Ukrainian-born Israeli, figure skater, 2016 European silver medallist, Olympian
- Alain Calmat, France, figure skater, Olympic silver, world championship gold, silver, 2× bronze
- Galit Chait, Israel, ice dancer, world championship bronze, Olympian
- Sasha Cohen, US, figure skater, 2006 US Champion, 3× World medalist, 2006 Olympic silver
- Amber Corwin, US, figure skater
- Natalia Dubova, Russia/URS, ice dancer
- Loren Galler-Rabinowitz, US, ice dancer, competes with partner David Mitchell; US Championships bronze
- Aleksandr Gorelik, URS, pair skater, Olympic silver, world championship 2× silver, bronze
- Melissa Gregory, US, figure skater, ice dancer with Denis Petukhov, US Championships 3 silvers, 2 bronze
- Natalia Gudina, Ukrainian-born Israeli, figure skater, Olympian
- Emily Hughes, US, figure skater, World Junior Figure Skating Championships bronze, US Championships bronze, silver
- Sarah Hughes, US, figure skater, Olympic gold, world championship bronze
- Ronald Joseph, US, figure skater, US Junior Champion, US Championships gold, 2× silver, and bronze, world championship silver, bronze, 1964 Olympic bronze
- Vivian Joseph, US, figure skater, US Junior Champion, US Championships gold, 2× silver, and bronze, world championship silver, bronze, 1964 Olympic bronze
- Gennadi Karponossov, Russia, ice dancer & coach, Olympic gold, world championship 2× gold, silver, 2× bronze
- Felix Kaspar, Austria, figure skater, Olympic bronze
- Tamar Katz, US-born Israeli, figure skater
- Evgeni Krasnopolski, Ukraine-born Israel, Olympian
- Lily Kronberger, Hungary, figure skater, world championship 4× gold, 2× bronze, World Figure Skating Hall of Fame
- Dylan Moscovitch, Canada, pairs skater, 2011 Canadian national champion, 2014 Olympic silver
- Emilia Rotter, Hungary, pair skater, world championship 4× gold, silver, 2× Olympic bronze
- Louis Rubenstein, Canada, figure skater, world champion, World Figure Skating Hall of Fame
- Lionel Rumi, Israel, ice dancer
- Sergei Sakhnovsky, Israel, ice dancer with Galit Chait, world championship bronze, Olympian
- Daniel Samohin, Israel, figure skater, 2016 World Junior Champion; former junior world record holder, Olympian
- Michael Seibert, US, ice dancer, US Figure Skating Championships 5× gold, World Figure Skating Championships 3× bronze
- Robert Shmalo, US, ice dancer
- Julia Shapiro, Russia-born Israel, pair skater, World Junior bronze
- Michael Shmerkin, URS-born Israeli, figure skater
- Simon Shnapir, Russian-born US, pairs skater, 2× US national champion, 2014 Olympic bronze
- Igor Shpilband, URS, ice dancer, world junior championship gold, silver; coach to several world champion teams
- Jamie Silverstein, US, figure skater, ice dancer with Ryan O'Meara, US Championships bronze
- Irina Slutskaya, Russia, figure skater, Olympic silver & bronze, world championship 2× gold, 3× silver & 1× bronze, 4× Russian champion, 7× European champion
- Maxim Staviski, Russian-born Bulgarian, ice dancer, world championship gold, silver, bronze
- László Szollás, Hungary, pair skater, world championship gold & silver, 2× Olympic bronze
- Isabella Tobias, US-born Israeli ice dancer, represented Lithuania at 2014 Winter Olympics. Currently representing Israel.
- Alexandra Zaretski, Belarusian-born Israeli, ice dancer, Olympian
- Roman Zaretski, Belarusian-born Israeli, ice dancer, Olympian
Golf
- Amy Alcott, US, LPGA Tour, World Golf Hall of Fame
- Herman Barron, US, PGA Tour
- Laetitia Beck, Israel, Israeli champion & 3× Maccabiah Games gold, LPGA Tour
- Daniel Berger, US, PGA Tour
- Erica Blasberg, US, LPGA Tour
- Bruce Fleisher, US, PGA Tour
- Paul Friedlander, Eswatini, Sunshine Tour
- Max Greyserman, US, PGA Tour
- Max Homa, US, 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Champion, PGA Tour
- Jonathan Kaye, US, PGA Tour
- Skip Kendall, US, Champions Tour
- Alexander Lévy, France, European Tour
- David Lipsky, US, Asian Tour
- Sam Little, England, European Tour
- David Merkow, US, Northwestern University, 2006 Big Ten Golfer of the Year
- Rob Oppenheim, US, PGA Tour
- Corey Pavin, US, PGA Tour and Champions Tour
- Morgan Pressel, US, LPGA Tour
- Monte Scheinblum, US, 1992 US & World Long Drive Champion
- Zohar Sharon, Israel
- Tony Sills, US, PGA Tour
- Ben Silverman, Canada, PGA Tour
Gymnastics
- Ruth Abeles, Israel, Olympian
- Estella Agsteribbe, Netherlands, Olympic champion, killed by the Nazis in Auschwitz
- Lilia Akhaimova, Russia, Olympic gold artistic gymnast at the 2020 Summer Olympics
- Linoy Ashram, Israel, Olympic gold and 6× World Championships silver
- Daria Atamanov, Israel, Olympian, European Champion and World medalist
- Shani Bakanov, Israel, 2x World Championships gold
- Eliza Banchuk, Israel, 2x World Championships gold
- Yana Batyrshina, Russia, Olympic silver
- Alyssa Beckerman, US, national champion, 2 silver & bronze
- Valery Belenky, URS/Azerbaijan/Germany, Olympic champion, bronze
- Ralli Ben-Yehuda, Israel, Olympian
- Moran Buzovski, Israel, Olympian
- Elka de Levie, Netherlands, Olympic champion
- Abraham de Oliveira, Netherlands, Olympian
- Artem Dolgopyat, Ukrainian-born Israeli, Olympic gold and silver for Israel
- Olena Dvornichenko, Israel/Ukraine, rhythmic gymnastics
- Philip Erenberg, US, Olympic silver
- Alfred Flatow, Germany, 3× Olympic champion, silver
- Gustav Felix Flatow, Germany, 2× Olympic champion
- Samu Fóti, Hungary, Olympic silver
- Limor Friedman, Israel, Olympian
- Adar Friedmann, Israel, 2x World Championships gold
- Mitch Gaylord, US, Olympic champion, silver, 2× bronze
- Imre Gellért, Hungary, Olympic silver
- Brian Ginsberg, US, 2x Pan-American champion
- Nancy Goldsmith, Israel, Olympian
- Maria Gorokhovskaya, Russia/URS, Olympic 2× champion, 5× silver
- Abie Grossfeld, US, 8× Pan American champion, 7× Maccabiah champion, coach
- George Gulack, US, Olympic champion
- Miriam Kara, Israel, Olympian
- Ágnes Keleti, Hungary, 5× Olympic champion, 3× silver, 2× bronze, International Gymnastics Hall of Fame
- Alice Kertész, Hungary, Olympic champion, silver ; world silver
- Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva, Australia, Olympian, Commonwealth Games clubs champion, rhythmic gymnast
- Natalia Laschenova, Russia/URS, Olympic champion
- Ya'akov Levi, Israel, Olympian
- Tatiana Lysenko, URS/Ukraine, 2× Olympic champion, bronze
- Valeria Maksyuta, Ukraine/Israel, multiple World Cup medalist, Israeli Olympian, Maccabiah Games champion
- Phoebe Mills, US, Olympic bronze
- Abraham Mok, Netherlands
- Yohanan Moyal, Israel, Olympian
- Helena Nordheim, Netherlands, Olympic champion, killed by the Nazis in Sobibór
- Mikhail Perelman, URS, Olympic champion
- Katerina Pisetsky, Israel/Ukraine, rhythmic gymnast
- Anna Polak, Netherlands, Olympic champion, killed by the Nazis in Sobibór
- Vladimir Portnoi, URS, Olympic silver and bronze
- Aly Raisman, US, Olympic champion, silver, bronze ; world gold, silver, and bronze
- Yulia Raskina, Belarus, Olympic silver
- Lihie Raz, US/Israel, European Championship bronze, Olympian artistic gymnast for Israel
- Neta Rivkin, Israel, world bronze
- Irina Risenzon, Hungary-born Israel, Olympian
- Monica Rokhman, US, Olympian
- Maria Savenkov, Israel/Russia, rhythmic gymnast
- Samantha Shapiro, US, 2x Pan-American champion
- Alexander Shatilov, Uzbekistan/Israel, world bronze, European champion
- Yelena Shushunova, Russia/URS, Olympic 2× champion, silver, bronze
- Judijke Simons, Netherlands, Olympic champion, killed by the Nazis in Sobibór
- Samantha Smith, Canada, Olympian
- Kerri Strug, US, Olympic champion, bronze
- Victoria Veinberg Filanovsky, Russia/Israel, youth Olympian for Israel
- Rahel Vigdozchik, Israel, rhythmic gymnast
- Veronika Vitenberg, Israel/Belarus, rhythmic gymnast
- Julie Zetlin, US, 2010 US champion, rhythmic gymnastics
- Valerie Zimring, US, 1984 US National Champion, 5× Maccabiah Champion
Horse racing
- Georges Stern, France
- Sam Waley-Cohen, Britain, National Hunt jockey; winner of the Cheltenham Gold Cup, Grand National, and King George VI Chase.
Ice hockey
- Rudi Ball, Germany, right wing, Olympic bronze, world runner-up, bronze, IIHF Hall of Fame
- Andrew Berenzweig, US, defenseman
- Max Birbraer, Russia/Kazakhstan; lived & played in Israel; 1st Israeli drafted by NHL team
- Austin Block, US, center and forward
- Jonathon Blum, US, defenseman
- Ross Brooks, Canada, goaltender
- Mike Brown, US, right wing
- Zeev Buium, Israel/US, defenseman, 1st Israeli citizen to play in NHL
- Hy Buller, Canada-born US, All-Star defenseman
- André Burakovsky, Austria-born Sweden, left wing
- Robert Burakovsky, Sweden, right wing
- Andrew Calof, Canada, centre
- Michael Cammalleri, Canada, left wing
- Carter Camper, US, center
- Sasha Chmelevski, US, center
- Jakob Chychrun, US/Canada, defenseman
- Colby Cohen, US, defenseman
- Samantha Cogan, Canada, forward
- Charlie Cotch, Canada, left wing
- Olivier Dame-Malka, Canada-born France, defenceman
- Sara DeCosta, US, goaltender, Olympic gold and silver, 2000 & 2002 USA Hockey Women's Player of the Year Award
- Jason Demers, Canada, defenceman
- Scott Drevitch, US, defense
- Justin Duberman, US, right wing
- Steve Dubinsky, Canada, centre
- Alon Eizenman, Canada-born Israel, centre
- Oren Eizenman, Canada-born Israel, centre
- David Elsner, Germany, right wing
- Sam Faber, US, forward
- Adam Fox, US, defenseman
- Ethen Frank, US, forward
- Aerin Frankel, US, goaltender
- Kaleigh Fratkin, Canada, defenceman
- Doug Friedman, US, forward
- Mark Friedman, Canada, defenceman
- Chelsey Goldberg, US, forward
- Jørn Goldstein, Norway, goaltender, Olympian and national team, awarded the Gold Puck as best player of the season
- Dov Grumet-Morris, US, goaltender
- Cole Guttman, US, center
- Jeff Halpern, US, center
- Jordan Harris, US, defenseman
- Gizzy Hart, Canada, left wing
- Elle Hartje, US, forward
- Mike Hartman, US, left wing
- Karel Hartmann, Czechoslovakia, left wing, Olympic bronze medal, vice-president of the International Ice Hockey Federation.
- Adam Henrich, Canada, left wing/centre
- Michael Henrich, Canada, right wing, 1st Jewish player drafted in NHL 1st round
- Eric Himelfarb, Canada, centre
- Kim Hirschovits, Finland, center
- Josh Ho-Sang, Canada, right wing
- Ellen Weinberg-Hughes, US, defenseman, world championship silver medal
- Jack Hughes, US, center, 2019 NHL Entry Draft #1 overall pick
- Luke Hughes, US, defenseman,
- Quinn Hughes, US, defenseman
- Zach Hyman, Canada, left wing/centre, 1st and only Jewish player to score more than 50 goals in an NHL regular season
- Peter Ing, Canada, goaltender
- Joe Ironstone, Canada, goaltender
- Max Kaminsky, Canada, centre
- Evan Kaufmann, US, forward
- Mikhail Kravets, Russia, right wing
- Luke Kunin, US, center
- Alfred Kuchevsky, URS/Russia, defenseman, Olympic champion, bronze
- Max Labovitch, Canada, right wing
- Brendan Leipsic, Canada-Russia, left wing
- Devon Levi, Canada, goaltender
- David Levin, Israeli-born Canadian, left wing, 1st overall 2015 OHL draft selection
- Alex Levinsky, US/Canada, defenceman
- Grant Lewis, US, defenseman
- David Littman, US, goaltender
- Yuri Lyapkin, URS/Russia, defenseman
- David Meckler, US, left wing
- Jacob Micflikier, Canada, forward
- David Nemirovsky, Canada, right wing
- Eric Nystrom, US, left wing, son of former NHL player Bob Nystrom
- Cory Pecker, Canada, right wing, drafted 6th round by Calgary Flames in 1999
- Bob Plager, Canada, defenceman
- Chase Priskie, US, defenseman
- Yaniv Perets, Canada, goaltender
- Dylan Reese, US, defenseman )
- Steve Richmond, US, defenseman
- Maurice Roberts, US, goaltender
- Samuel Rothschild, Canada, left wing
- François Rozenthal, France, right wing
- Maurice Rozenthal, France, right wing
- Max Sasson, US, center
- Mathieu Schneider, US, defenseman
- Eliezer Sherbatov, Israeli-Canadian, left wing
- Todd Simon, Canada, centre
- Trevor Smith, Canada, centre
- Brett Sterling, US, left wing
- Ronnie Stern, Canada, right wing
- Jeremy Swayman, US, goaltender
- Nate Thompson, US, center
- Josh Tordjman, Canada, goaltender
- Márton Vas, Hungary, right wing
- Mike Veisor, Canada, goaltender
- Jake Walman, Canada-US, defenseman
- David Warsofsky, US, defenseman
- Hermann Weiss, Austria, goaltender
- Jasper Weatherby, US, forward
- Ethan Werek, Canada-China, forward
- Ozzy Wiesblatt, Canada, right wing
- Brian Wilks, Canada, centre
- Bob Winograd, Canada, defenceman, first Jewish player selected in the NHL draft
- Bernie Wolfe, Canada, goaltender
- Victor "Chick" Zamick, Canada, centre
- Larry Zeidel, Canada, defenceman
- Alexei Zhitnik, Ukraine-born Russia, defenseman
- Jason Zucker, US, left wing
Judo
- Yael Arad, Israel, 1992 Olympic silver
- Mark Berger, Canada, Olympic silver & bronze
- Robert Berland, US, Olympic silver
- Ārons Bogoļubovs, URS/Latvia, Olympic bronze
- James Bregman, US, Olympic bronze
- Aaron Cohen, US
- Yarden Gerbi, Israel, 2016 Olympic bronze
- Maya Goshen, Israel, 2022 world bronze medalist for mixed teams
- Raz Hershko, Israel, Olympic silver and bronze, World 2x bronze, European champion
- Felipe Kitadai, Brazil, Olympic bronze
- Daniela Krukower, Israel/Argentina, world champion
- Inbar Lanir, Israel, World Champion, Olympic silver and bronze
- Charlee Minkin, US, Pan American women's champion
- Sagi Muki, Israel, 2019 World Champion, Olympic bronze, 2022 World bronze medalist for mixed teams, 2015 & 2018 European champion
- Peter Paltchik, Israel, Olympic 2x bronze, world 2x bronze
- Moshe Ponte, Israel, Olympian
- Gefen Primo, Israel, 2018 & 2021 European bronze medalist, 2021 World bronze medalist
- Shira Rishony, Israel, -48 kg
- Or "Ori" Sasson, Israel, 2016 and 2020 Olympic bronze medalist
- Alice Schlesinger, Israel-Britain, World Judo Championships bronze; European junior champion
- Baruch Shmailov, Israel, Olympic bronze medalist, European U23 champion, European junior champion
- Oren Smadja, Israel, 1992 Olympic bronze medalist
- Ehud Vaks, Israel
- Gal Yekutiel, Israel, European bronze medalist 2× Olympian
- Ariel "Arik" Ze'evi, Israel, 2004 Olympic bronze medalist
Lacrosse
- Max Seibald, US
Mixed martial arts
- Cyril Benzaquen, France, world champion of kickboxing, world champion of Muaythai, light heavyweight
- Nili Block, Israeli world champion kickboxer and Muay Thai fighter; 60 kg weight class
- Johann Fauveau, France, world champion of Kickboxing, super welterweight
- Ilya Grad, Israel, lightweight Muay Thai boxing champion
- Emily Kagan, US, UFC fighter in the women's strawweight division; competed in season 20 of The Ultimate Fighter
- Sarah Kaufman, Canada, former Invicta and Strikeforce Bantamweight champion.
- Noad "Neo" Lahat, Israel, featherweight MMA
- Ross Levine, US, karate combat champion
- Natan Levy*, Israel, featherweight mixed martial artist in the UFC
- Ido Pariente, Israel, lightweight Pankration World Champion
- Yulia Sachkov, Israel, world champion kickboxer
- Marina Shafir, Moldova-US
- Rory Singer, US, middleweight fighter from The Ultimate Fighter 3
Motorsport
- Woolf Barnato, UK, x3 24 hours of Le Mans winner
- Brandon Bernstein, US, drag racing driver and son of Kenny Bernstein
- Kenny Bernstein, US, drag racing driver and former NASCAR owner
- Jo Bonnier, Sweden, Formula One and Sports Car driver
- François Cevert, France, Formula One driver
- Tim Coronel, Netherlands, Twin brother of Tom
- Tom Coronel, Netherlands, World Touring Car Championship
- Alon Day, Israel, Whelen Euro Series
- Jon Denning, US, NASCAR driver and National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame and Museum inductee
- René Dreyfus, France, Grand Prix racer
- Thomas Erdos, Brazil, Sports Cars, LMP2 champion 2007, 2010, British GT Champion 2002, British Formula Renault champion 1990
- Mário Haberfeld, Brazil, Champ Car driver
- Kyle Krisiloff, US, NASCAR and USAC driver
- Steve Krisiloff, US, USAC and CART Championship Car driver
- Eric Lichtenstein, Argentina, GP3 driver
- Stirling Moss, UK, Formula One driver
- Paul Newman, US, motorsport team owner and driver; actor
- Chanoch Nissany, Israel, Formula One test-driver, father of Roy Nissany
- Roy Nissany, Israel-France, Formula V8 3.5, son of Chanoch Nissany
- Peter Revson, US, Formula One driver
- Mauri Rose, US, Indy driver, Indy 500 winner
- Ricardo Rosset, Brazil, Formula One driver
- Eddie Sachs, US, 8× starter of the Indianapolis 500, 1957–64, taking pole position in 1960 and 1961, with his best finish being second in 1961
- Ian Scheckter, South Africa, Formula One driver
- Jody Scheckter, South Africa, Formula One driver, Formula One World Drivers champion
- Tomas Scheckter, South Africa, Indy Racing League driver
- Nolan Siegel, US, IndyCar driver
- Lance Stroll, Canada-Belgium, Formula One driver, second youngest podium finisher in F1 history, and youngest rookie podium. Son of Lawrence Stroll
- Sheila van Damm, British rally driver
- Lionel Van Praag, Australian motorcycle Speedway World Champion
- Robert Shwartzman, Russia-Israel, racing driver, competed in the FIA Formula 2 Championship for 2020 and 2021 where he finished 4th and 2nd respectively. Was a Ferrari reserve driver. Currently competing in the NTT Indycar Series, won pole position as a rookie at 109th Indianapolis 500
Professional wrestling
- David Arquette, US, former WCW World Heavyweight Championship
- Lior Ben-David, Israeli-British
- Matt Bloom, US, WWE Intercontinental Champion and IWGP World Tag Team Champion
- Beau Beverly, member of WWE tag team the Beverly Brothers
- Eddie Creatchman
- Floyd Creatchman
- Colt Cabana, US, a.k.a. "Scotty Goldman", 2× NWA World Heavyweight Champion
- Ric Drasin
- Noam Dar, Israeli-born Scottish professional wrestler
- Maxwell Jacob Friedman, AEW World Heavyweight Champion
- Joel Gertner
- Bill Goldberg, US, 1× WCW World Heavyweight Champion, 1× World Heavyweight Champion and 2× WWE Universal Champion, second longest winning streak in professional wrestling
- Simon Gotch
- Drew Gulak, US, former WWE/NXT Cruiserweight Champion
- Rafael Halperin, Austrian-born Israeli
- Paul Heyman
- Barry Horowitz, US
- Abe Jacobs
- Andy Kaufman
- Billy Kidman
- Kelly Kelly, US, WWE Divas Champion and WWE 24/7 Champion
- Yakov Kozalchik
- Butch Levy, US, 2× NWA World Tag Team Champion
- Donn Lewin
- Mark Lewin
- Ted Lewin
- Boris Malenko, US, multiple professional wrestling championships throughout the 1960s and 1970s
- Chad Malenko, US, 4× RQW Heavyweight Champion
- Dean Malenko, US, 2× WWF Light Heavyweight Champion
- Joe Malenko
- Ida Mae Martinez
- Leapin' Lanny Poffo, Canada-US, Savage's brother
- Raven, US, 2× ECW World Heavyweight Champion, NWA World Heavyweight Champion, and 27× WWF/E Hardcore Champion
- Ernie Roth
- Bert Ruby
- Randy Savage, US, 2× WWF World Heavyweight Champion and 4x WCW World Heavyweight Champion,WWF Intercontinental Champion
- Scott L. Schwartz
- Marina Shafir
- Tomer Shalom, Israel
- Izzy Slapawitz
- David Starr
- Ray Stern
- Matt Stryker
- Matt Sydal, US, WWE Tag Team Champion
- Lisa Marie Varon, US, 2× WWE Women's Championship
Rock climbing
- [Oscar Eckenstein, England, pioneer in the sport of bouldering
- Jesse Grupper, US, Olympic rock climber
- Renan Öztürk, Turkish-American, rock climber
Rowing
- Jean Klein, France, Olympic silver
- Károly Levitzky, Hungary, Olympic bronze
- Guy Nosbaum, France, Olympic silver
- Allen Rosenberg, US, champion and Olympics coach
- Donald Spero, US multi-collegiate and national champion, multi-European medalist, world champion, Henley Royal Regatta champion, Gold Cup champion, US Olympian, and a founder of the National Rowing Foundation
- Josh West, American-born British, men's eight, Olympic silver, 2× World Rowing Championships silver and one bronze
Rugby league
- Lewis Harris, England, English rugby league
- Wilf Rosenberg, South African rugby union, and later rugby league
- Albert Rosenfeld, Australia, five-eighth, Australian rugby league
- Ian Rubin, Ukraine/Australia, Russia national team
- Geoff Selby, Australia, St George Dragons
- Mark Shulman, Australian rugby league
Rugby union
- Nathan Amos,
- Louis Babrow, South Africa, national team
- Leo Camron, South Africa/Israel; helped introduce rugby to Israel
- Hacjivah Dayimani, South Africa, flanker, Stormers
- Nate Ebner, 2016 US Olympic Team at Rio de Janeiro
- Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, South Africa, Stormers
- Okey Geffin, South Africa, forward, national team
- Samuel Goodman, US, player and manager of gold-winning US Olympic team
- David Horwitz, Australian rugby union Fly-half and Centre.
- Joe Kaminer, South Africa, national team
- Josh Kronfeld, New Zealand, flanker, national team
- Henri Levée, France, centre
- Sarah Levy, South Africa/US Olympic bronze, rugby union and rugby sevens player; great-granddaughter of Louis Babrow
- Aaron Liffchak, England, prop
- Shawn Lipman, South Africa/US, US national team
- Alan Menter, England/South Africa, national team
- Cecil Moss, South Africa, national team
- Sydney Nomis, national team
- John Raphael, Belgium/England, national team
- Jeremy Reingold, South Africa, WP, rugby union, Springbok U21
- Wilf Rosenberg, South Africa; rugby union, and later rugby league
- Myer Rosenblum, South Africa/Australia, flanker,
- Rupert Rosenblum, Australia, Australia national team
- Albert Rosenfeld, Australian rugby player
- Fred Smollan, South Africa, national team
- Bethel Solomons, Ireland, forward, national team
- Scott Spurling England, Hooker
- Dallen Stanford, US, flyhalf/fullback, US national sevens team BH
- Joel Stransky, South Africa, fly-half, national team, kicked winning points in 1995 Rugby World Cup final
- Zack Test, US, wing/fullback, US national sevens team
- Morris Zimerman,
Sailing
- Daniel Adler, Brazil, Olympic silver
- Eldad Amir, Israel, sailor
- Jo Aleh, New Zealand, sailor, Olympic champion, world champion
- Yehuda Atedji, Israel, sailor
- Shimshon Brokman, Israel, sailor
- Tony Bullimore, British, yachtsman
- Vered Buskila, Israel, sailor
- Zefania Carmel, Israel, yachtsman, world champion
- Don Cohan, US, Olympic bronze
- Maayan Davidovich, Israel, windsurfer
- Nufar Edelman, Israel, sailor
- Larry Ellison, US, sailor
- Anat Fabrikant, Israel, sailor
- Gal Fridman, Israel, windsurfer, 2004 Olympic gold medalist, 1996 Olympic bronze medalist
- Eitan Friedlander, Israel, sailor, world championship gold
- Robert Halperin, US, yachting
- Amit Inbar, Israel, windsurfer
- Clare Jacobs, United States, July 1963 winner of 200 mile Chicago Yacht Club Race to Mackinac aboard 45-foot Falcon II
- Peter Jaffe, Great Britain, Olympic silver
- Sharon Kantor, Israel, IQFoil windsurfer, Olympic silver, world championship gold
- Nike Kornecki, Italy-born Israel, 470-class
- Lee Korzits, Israel, windsurfer, 4× world champion
- Lydia Lazarov, Israel, yachtsman, world champion
- Valentyn Mankin, URS/Ukraine, only sailor in Olympic history to win gold medals in three different classes, silver
- Nimrod Mashiah, Israel, windsurfer, ranked No. 1 in world
- Mark Mendelblatt, US, Olympic sailor, 2× world silver |laser] and sunfish, bronze
- [Robert Mosbacher, US, world championship gold & silver, gold, and bronze
- Tom Reuveny, Israel, Olympic champion, men's iQFoil windsurfing, 2x world U21 champion, youth champion
- Ran Shantal, Israel, 470-class, Olympian
- Nir Shental, Israel, 470-class, Olympian
- Dan Torten, Israel, 470-class, Olympian
- Ran Torten, Israel, 470-class, Olympian
- Shahar Tzuberi, Israel, windsurfer, 2008 Olympic bronze medalist ; 2009 & 2010 European Windsurf champion
- Yoav Cohen, Israel, windsurfer, fourth place at the 2020 Summer Olympics
- Eli Zuckerman, Israel, yachtsman, Olympian
Shooting
- Guy Starik, Israel, world record in 50 m rifle prone
- Lev Vainshtein, URS/Russia, 3× team world champion and Olympic bronze medalist
Skateboarding
- Alan Gelfand, US, invented the ollie, the foundational skateboarding trick
- Minna Stess, US, Olympian
- Lynn Kramer, US, 17x Women's World Champion in Slalom Skateboarding, and a member of the Skateboard Hall of Fame
Skeleton
- Adam Edelman, US-Israel, 4× National Champion, 2018 Olympian
Skiing and snowboarding
- Arielle Gold, US, Olympic bronze snowboarder, world champion
- Taylor Gold, US, snowboarder
- Jared Goldberg, US, Olympic alpine skier, US Junior Championships combined champion, US Championships downhill champion
- Drew Goldsack, Canada, cross country skier, 2× Olympian
- Anna Segal, Australia, Olympic freestyle slopestyle skier, 2× world champion
- Virgile Vandeput, Israel, Belgian-born, slalom & giant slalom skier, Olympian
Speed skating
- Vladislav Bykanov, Ukraine-born Israel, short-track, Olympian and Silver European Championship
- Andy Gabel, US, Olympic silver
- Rafayel Grach, URS, Olympic silver, bronze
- Irving Jaffee, US, 2× Olympic champion, world records
- Emery Lehman, US, Olympic bronze
- Dan Weinstein, US, short-track, 3× world champion
Sports Climbing
- Jesse Grupper, US, Pan-American gold medallist
Softball
- Tamara Statman, Israeli National Softball Team
Surfing
- Makua Rothman, US, Big Wave World Champion
- Shaun Tomson, South Africa, world champion
- Anat Lelior, Israel, 2020 Summer Olympics
Swimming
- Margarete "Grete" Adler, Austria, Olympic bronze
- Vadim Alexeev, Kazakhstan-born Israeli, breaststroke
- Jessica Antiles, US
- Semyon Belits-Geiman, URS, Olympic silver and bronze ; world record in men's 800m freestyle
- Adi Bichman, Israel
- Damián Blaum, Argentina, open water
- Gérard Blitz, Belgium, Olympic bronze, International Swimming Hall of Fame
- Yoav Bruck, Israel, Israel
- Tiffany Cohen, US, 2× Olympic champion ; 2× Pan American champion, International Swimming Hall of Fame
- Anthony Ervin, US, Olympic champion, silver ; 2× world champion
- Yoav Gath, Israel
- Scott Goldblatt, US, Olympic champion, silver ; world championships silver, bronze
- Eran Cohen Groumi, Israel
- Andrea Gyarmati, Hungary, Olympic silver and bronze ; world championships bronze, International Swimming Hall of Fame
- Alfréd Hajós, Hungary, 3× Olympic champion, International Swimming Hall of Fame
- Michael "Miki" Halika, Israel, 200m butterfly, 200m and 400m individual medley
- Judith Haspel, Austrian-born Israeli, held every Austrian women's middle and long-distance freestyle record in 1935, refused to represent Austria in 1936 Summer Olympics along with Ruth Langer and Lucie Goldner, protesting Hitler, stating, "I refuse to enter a contest in a land which so shamefully persecutes my people."
- Otto Herschmann, Austria, Olympic 2-silver ; arrested by Nazis, and died in Izbica concentration camp
- Amit Ivry, Israel, Olympic semi-finalist
- Lenny Krayzelburg, Ukrainian-born US, 4× Olympic champion ; 3× world champion and 2× silver ; 3 world records
- Herbert Klein, Germany, Olympic bronze ; 3 world records
- Dan Kutler, US-born Israeli
- Ruth Langer Lawrence, Austria; along with Judith Haspel and Lucie Goldner refused to represent Austria in 1936 Summer Olympics, their protest stating "We do not boycott Olympia, but Berlin".
- Keren Leibovitch, Israeli Paralympic swimmer, 3× world champion, 3 world records, and 8× Paralympic medal winner
- Jason Lezak, US, 4× Olympic champion, silver, 2× bronze ; 8× world champion, silver, bronze
- Klara Milch, Austria, Olympic bronze
- József Munk, Hungary, Olympic silver
- Alfred "Artem" Nakache, France; world record, one-third of French 2× world record ; imprisoned by Nazis in Auschwitz, where his wife and daughter were killed
- Paul Neumann, Austria, Olympic champion
- Maxim Podoprigora, Ukrainian-born Austrian Olympic swimmer
- Sarah Poewe, South African-born German, Olympic bronze
- Marilyn Ramenofsky, US, Olympic silver ; 3× world record for 400m freestyle
- Jeremy Reingold, South African, 200m individual medley world record, South South African SA under-21 rugby team
- Keena Rothhammer, US, Olympic champion and bronze ; world champion and silver, International Swimming Hall of Fame
- Albert Schwartz, US, Olympic bronze
- Otto Scheff, Austria, Olympic champion and 2× bronze
- Mark Spitz, US, Olympic champion, 1 silver, 1 bronze ), has the second-most gold medals won in a single Olympic Games ; 5× Pam Am champion; 10× Maccabiah champion; world records, International Swimming Hall of Fame
- Josephine Sticker, Austria, Olympic bronze
- Tal Stricker, Israel
- András Székely, Hungary, Olympic silver and bronze ; died in a Nazi concentration camp
- Éva Székely, Hungary, Olympic champion & silver ; International Swimming Hall of Fame; mother of Andrea Gyarmati
- Lejzor Ilja Szrajbman, Poland, Olympic 4 × 200m freestyle relay; killed by the Nazis in Majdanek concentration camp
- Judit Temes, Hungary, Olympic champion, bronze
- Dara Torres, US, Olympic 4× champion, 4× silver, 4× bronze ; world championship silver ; Pan American champion
- Eithan Urbach, Israel, backstroke, European championship silver & bronze
- Otto Wahle, Austria/US, 2× Olympic silver and bronze ; International Swimming Hall of Fame
- Garrett Weber-Gale, US, 2× Olympic champion ; world champion, silver
- Wendy Weinberg, US, Olympic bronze ; Pan American champion
- Claire Weinstein, US, Olympic silver, world champion
- Ben Wildman-Tobriner, US, Olympic champion ; world champion
- Wally Wolf, US, Olympic champion
- Imre Zachár, Hungary, Olympic silver
Table tennis
- Ruth Aarons, US, 2× world champion
- Ivan Andreadis, Czechoslovakia, 9x world champion
- Viktor Barna, Hungary/Britain, 22× world champion, International Table Tennis Foundation Hall of Fame
- Laszlo Bellak, Hungary/US, 7× world champion, ITTFHoF
- Dora Beregi, Hungarian 2× world champion
- Richard Bergmann, Austria/Britain, 7× world champion, ITTFHoF
- Benny Casofsky, English Swaythling Cup player
- Alojzy Ehrlich, Poland, 3× silver and 1× bronze in the world championships; incarcerated by the Nazis in Auschwitz; represented France after 1945
- Shimcha Finkelstein, Poland, World bronze medallist and first champion of Israel
- Magda Gál, Hungarian, 20 world championship medals
- Sandor Glancz, Hungarian, 4× world champion
- Tibor Házi, Hungarian three times world champion
- Jeff Ingber, English international
- Eddie Kantar, American bridge author; only person ever to have played in a World Bridge Championship and a World Table Tennis Championship
- Gertrude "Traute" Kleinová, Czechoslovakia, 3× world champion, incarcerated by the Nazis in Theresienstadt and Auschwitz
- Erwin Kohn, Austrian world champion
- Marina Kravchenko, Ukrainian-born Israeli, URS and Israel national teams
- Pavel Löwy, Czech world bronze medallist and believed to have died in concentration camp
- Hyman Lurie, English three times world bronze medallist
- Dick Miles, US, 10× US champion
- Ivor Montagu, Britain, national team and founder of the International Table Tennis Federation
- Leah Neuberger, "Miss Ping", US, 29× US champion
- Marty Reisman, US, 3× national champion
- Angelica Rozeanu, Romania/Israel, 17× world champion, ITTFHoF
- Samuel Schieff, Poland world bronze medallist and later Israel international
- Sol Schiff, US double world champion
- Anna Sipos, Hungary, 11× world champion, ITTFHoF
- Miklos Szabados, Hungary/Australia, 15× world champion
- Pablo Tabachnik, Argentina, national team
- Thelma Thall, US, 2× world table tennis champion
- David Zalcberg, Australia, national team
Taekwondo
- Mitchell Bobrow, USA, All American Open Grand Champion 1969, Madison Square Garden
- Avishag Semberg, Israel, Olympic bronze medalist 2020, European gold and silver
Tennis
- Jay Berger, US, USTA boys 18s singles champion, highest world ranking No. 7
- Gilad Bloom, Israel
- Madison Brengle, US, USTA girls 18s singles champion
- Gail Brodsky, US
- Elise Burgin, US, highest world singles ranking No. 22, highest world doubles ranking No. 7
- Angela Buxton, England, won 1956 French women's doubles and 1956 Wimbledon women's doubles, highest world ranking No. 9
- Audra Cohen, US, 2007 NCAA Women's Singles champion
- Julia Cohen, US, USTA girls 12s & 18s singles champion
- Stéphanie Cohen-Aloro, France
- Brian Dabul, Argentina, #1 junior in the world
- Pierre Darmon, France, highest world ranking No. 8
- Uberto De Morpurgo, Italy, Olympic bronze, highest world ranking No. 8
- Irvin Dorfman, US
- Eva Duldig, Austria/the Netherlands/Australia
- Jonathan Erlich, Israel, won 2008 Australian Open men's doubles, highest world doubles ranking No. 5
- Gastón Etlis, Argentina
- Marcel Felder, Uruguay
- Sharon Fichman, Canada
- Herbert Flam, US, 2× USTA boys 18s singles champion, Intercollegiate Tennis Association Hall of Fame, highest world ranking No. 4
- Allen Fox, US, NCAA singles and doubles champion, US champion, Intercollegiate Tennis Association Hall of Fame
- Mike Franks, US
- Brad Gilbert, US, highest world ranking No. 4, Olympic bronze
- Justin Gimelstob, US, USTA boys 16s & 18s singles champion, won 1998 Australian Open mixed doubles and 1998 French Open mixed doubles
- Camila Giorgi, Italy
- Shlomo Glickstein, Israel
- Julia Glushko, Israel
- Grant Golden, US
- Paul Goldstein, US, USTA boys 16s & 2× 18s singles champion
- Brian Gottfried, US, USTA boys 12s & 2× 18s singles champion, won 1975 & 1977 French Open men's doubles, and 1976 Wimbledon men's doubles, highest world singles ranking No. 3, and doubles ranking No. 2.
- Jim Grabb, US, won 1989 French Open men's doubles and 1992 US Open men's doubles, highest world doubles ranking No. 1
- Seymour Greenberg, US
- Jim Gurfein, US
- Julie Heldman, US, US girls 15s & 18s singles champion, highest world ranking No. 5
- Helen Jacobs, US, won 1932–35 US Open singles, 1932–35 US Open women’s doubles, 1934 US Open mixed, and 1936 Wimbledon singles, International Tennis Hall of Fame, highest world singles ranking No. 1.
- Martín Jaite, Argentina, highest world ranking No. 10
- Anita Kanter, US, US girls 18s singles champion, highest world singles ranking No. 10.
- Aslan Karatsev, Russian-Israeli tennis player, Olympic silver
- Sofia Kenin, Russian-born US tennis player, 2020 Australia Open women's singles champion, highest world singles ranking #4.
- Ilana Kloss, South Africa, won 1976 US Open women's doubles and 1976 French Open mixed doubles, highest world doubles ranking No. 1.
- Zsuzsa Körmöczy, Hungary, won 1958 French Open singles, highest work singles ranking No. 2.
- Aaron Krickstein, US, USTA boys 16s & 18s singles champion, highest world ranking No. 6
- Steve Krulevitz, US/Israel
- Jesse Levine, Canada/US, won US Clay Court 14 nationals, USTA boys’ 16s doubles championship, 2005 Wimbledon boys' doubles championship.
- Harel Levy, Israel
- Evgenia Linetskaya, Israel
- Scott Lipsky, US, USTA # 1 junior in singles and doubles ; won USTA championships in 1995 Boys’ 14 Clay Court singles, 1997 Boys’ 16s Clay Court singles, 1996 and 1997 Boys’ 16 doubles, and the 1999 Boys’ Clay Court doubles’; won 2011 French Open mixed doubles.
- Jamie Loeb, US, 2012 US 18s singles and doubles champion, 2015 NCAA singles champion.
- Amos Mansdorf, Israel
- Bruce Manson, US
- Stacy Margolin, US
- Nicolás Massú, Chile, highest world ranking No. 9, 2× Olympic champion
- Sam Match, US
- Larry Nagler, US, 1960 NCAA Tennis Singles champion and Doubles champion, ITA Hall of Fame.
- Tzipora Obziler, Israel
- Tom Okker, Dutch, won 1973 French Open men's doubles, 1976 US Open men's doubles, highest world ranking No. 3 in singles, and # 1 in doubles
- Noam Okun, Israel
- Yshai Oliel, Israel, 2016 French Open boys' doubles champion
- Shahar Pe'er, Israel, highest world ranking No. 11
- Shahar Perkiss, Israel
- Felix Pipes, Austria, Olympic silver
- Daniel Prenn, Germany & Britain, highest world ranking No. 6
- Henry Prusoff, US
- Andy Ram, Israel, won 2006 Wimbledon mixed doubles, 2007 French Open mixed doubles, 2008 Australian Open men's doubles, highest world doubles ranking No. 5
- Renée Richards, US
- Sergio Roitman, Argentina
- Noah Rubin, US, 2014 Wimbledon junior singles champion, 2014 US boys 18s champion in singles & doubles
- Michael Russell, US, ranked No. 1 in USTA boys 16s & 18s, all-time-record 23 USTA Pro Circuit singles titles
- Jeff Salzenstein, US, 1986 US boys' 12 Hard Court Singles & Doubles Champion
- Dick Savitt, US, won 1951 Wimbledon men's singles, highest world ranking No. 2
- Diego Schwartzman, Argentina, highest world ranking No. 8
- Abe Segal, South Africa
- Vic Seixas, US, won 1952 US men's doubles, 1953 Wimbledon men's singles, 1953 & 1955 Wimbledon mixed doubles, 1953 French mixed doubles, 1953–55 US mixed doubles, 1954 Wimbledon mixed doubles, 1954 US men's, 1954 US men's doubles, 1954–55 French men's doubles, 1955 Australian men's doubles, and 1956 Wimbledon mixed doubles, highest world ranking No. 3
- Dudi Sela, Israel, 2003 French Open junior doubles champion
- Julius Seligson, US, 2× boys 18s singles champion
- Denis Shapovalov, Israeli-born Canadian, highest world ranking No. 10
- Anna Smashnova, Israel, highest world ranking No.
15 - Harold Solomon, US, US boys 18s singles champion, highest world ranking No.
5 - Elina Svitolina, Ukraine, Olympic bronze
- Andrew Sznajder, Canada
- Brian Teacher, US, US boys 18s singles champion, won 1980 Australian Open singles, highest world ranking No.
7 - Eliot Teltscher, US, won 1983 French Open mixed doubles, highest world ranking No.
6 - Van Winitsky, US, 1977 Junior Wimbledon and Junior US Open champion
- Robbie Weiss, US, 1988 NCAA Division 1 Champion, All-American 1986 and 1988
Track and field
- Harold Abrahams, Britain, sprinter, Olympic champion & silver
- Sir Sidney Abrahams, Britain, Olympic long jumper
- Gashau Ayale, Israel, Olympic marathon
- Jo Ankier, Britain, record holder
- Gerry Ashworth, US, Olympic champion
- Aleksandr Averbukh, Israel, 2002 & 2006 European champion
- Seteng Ayele, Ethiopia/Israel, Olympic marathon
- Gretel Bergmann, German high jumper
- Ödön Bodor, Hungary, Olympic bronze
- Louis "Pinky" Clarke, US, world record ; Olympic champion
- Janet Cohansedgh, Iran
- Lillian Copeland, US, world records ; Olympic champion & silver
- Ibolya Csák, Hungary, Olympic champion & European champion high jumper
- Daniel Frank, US, long jump, Olympic silver
- Danielle Frenkel, Israel, high jumper, 2× national champion
- Hugo Friend, US, long jump, Olympic bronze
- Jim Fuchs, US, shot put & discus, 2× Olympic bronze ; 4× shot put world record holder, 2× Pan American champions
- Marty Glickman, US, sprinter & broadcaster; US Olympic team, All American
- Adam Goucher, US, 3:54 miler, 2000 Olympian, 1998 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships winner, 3rd in 2006 Prefontaine Classic 2-mile
- Milton Green, US, world records
- Ageze Guadie, Israel, Olympic marathon runner
- Gary Gubner, US, world shot put records, weightlifter
- Lilli Henoch, Germany, world records ; shot by the Nazis in Latvia
- Abby Hoffman, Canada, four-time Olympian
- Maria Leontyavna Itkina, Russia/URS, sprinter, world records
- Clare Jacobs, US, pole vaulter, Olympic bronze, world indoor record
- Harry Kane, British hurdler, held national records in the 1950s
- Deena Kastor, US, long-distance & marathon runner, US records ; Olympic bronze
- Elias Katz, Finland, Olympic champion & silver
- Abel Kiviat, US, world records ; Olympic champion & silver
- Mór Kóczán, Hungary, javelin, Olympic bronze
- Svetlana Krachevskaya, URS/Russia, shot put, Olympic silver
- Shaul Ladany, Yugoslavian-born Israeli racewalker, world record holder in the 50-mile walk, former world champion in the 100-kilometer walk
- Margaret Bergmann Lambert, US, champion, British high jump champion
- Henry Laskau, German-born US racewalker, won 42 national titles; Pan American champion; 4× Maccabiah champion
- Faina Melnik, URS/Ukraine, 11 world records; Olympic discus throw champion
- Alvah Meyer, US, runner, 2 world records ; Olympic silver
- Jemima Montag, Australia, 20 km race walk, Olympic 2x bronze, world championship silver
- Lon Myers, US, sprinter, world records
- Zhanna Pintusevich-Block, Ukraine, sprinter, world 100m & 200m champion
- Irina Press, URS/Russia, 2× Olympic champion
- Tamara Press, URS/Russia, 6 world records ; 3× Olympic champion and silver
- Myer Prinstein, US, world record ; 3× Olympic champion and silver
- Fanny "Bobbie" Rosenfeld, Canada, runner & long jumper, world record ; Olympic champion & silver
- Steven Solomon, Australia, sprinter, 2× Australian 400 metres champion
- Sam Stoller, US, world indoor record
- Dwight Stones, US, world record ; 2× Olympic bronze
- Irena Szewińska, Poland, sprinter & long jumper, world records ; 3× Olympic champion, 2 silver, and 2 bronze
- Marhu Teferi, Ethiopia/Israel, Olympic marathon
- Allan Tolmich, US, world records in the indoor 45 low hurdles, indoor 50 low hurdles, indoor 60-yard hurdles, 70 high hurdles, and 200m hurdles.
Triathlon
- Joanna Zeiger, US, triathlete, Ironman 70.3 world champion; world record
Volleyball
- Nelly Abramova, URS/Russia, Olympic silver
- Doug Beal, US, player & coach, national team
- Adriana Behar, Brazil, beach player; 2× Olympic silver; Pan American champion; 2× world champion
- Larisa Bergen, URS, Olympic silver
- Josh Binstock, Canada, 2x Olympian
- Yefim Chulak, URS, Olympic silver, bronze
- Marcelo Elgarten, Brazil, Olympic silver
- Dan Greenbaum, US, Olympic bronze
- Eliezer Kalina, Israel, 3× Paralympic gold
- Waldo Kantor, Argentina, Olympic bronze
- Alix Klineman, US, Olympic gold at the 2020 Summer Olympics
- Nataliya Kushnir, URS/Russia, Olympic silver
- Yevgeny Lapinsky, URS/Russia, Olympic champion, bronze
- Georgy Mondzolevsky, URS/Russia, 2× Olympic champion, 2× world champion
- Vladimir Patkin, URS/Russia, Olympic silver, bronze
- Igal Pazi, Israel, 2× Paralympic gold
- Bernard Rajzman, Brazil, Olympic silver; Pan American champion; world silver
- Sam Schachter, Canada
- Aryeh "Arie" Selinger, US & Dutch, player & coach
- Avital Selinger, Dutch, Olympic silver
- Eugene Selznick, US, 2× world champion, 2× Pan American champion, Hall of Fame
- Yuriy Venherovsky, URS, Olympic champion
- Chagai Zamir, Israel, 4× Paralympic Games champion
Water polo
- Róbert Antal, Hungary, Olympic champion
- Peter Asch, US, Olympic bronze
- István Barta, Hungary, Goalkeeper, Olympic champion, 1× gold, 1× Silver
- Gerard Blitz, Belgium, 2× Olympic silver, 2× bronze, International Swimming Hall of Fame, son of Maurice Blitz
- Maurice Blitz, Belgium, 2× Olympic silver, father of Gérard Blitz
- György Bródy, Hungary, goalkeeper, 2× Olympic champion
- Henri Cohen, Belgium, Olympic silver
- Kurt Epstein, Czechoslovak national team, Olympic competitor
- Boris Goikhman, URS, goalkeeper, Olympic silver, bronze
- György Kárpáti, Hungary, 3× Olympic champion, 1× bronze
- Béla Komjádi, Hungary, player and coach
- Jillian Kraus, US, defender, World Junior, gold
- Mihály Mayer, Hungary, 2× Olympic champion, 2× bronze
- Nikolai Melnikov, URS, Olympic champion
- Merrill Moses, US, goalkeeper, Olympic silver, Pan American champion
- Miklós Sárkány, Hungary, 2× Olympic champion
Weightlifting
- David Mark Berger, US-born Israeli, Maccabiah champion ; killed by terrorists in the Munich massacre
- Isaac "Ike" Berger, US, Olympic champion, 2× silver; 2× Pan American champion; 23 world records
- Robert Fein, US, Olympic champion
- Gary Gubner, US, 4 junior world records ; 3× Maccabiah champion
- Hans Haas, Austria, Olympic champion, silver
- Ben Helfgott, Polish-born British, 3× British champion, 3× Maccabiah champion; survived Buchenwald and Theresienstadt concentration camps, as all but one other of his family were killed by the Nazis
- Reuven Helman, Maccabiah Olympian and Israeli Weightlifting Champion
- Moisei Kas’ianik, Ukraine/URS, world champion
- Nora Köppel, Argentina, Olympian
- Naomi Kutin, US, world record in 44 kg weight class
- Edward Lawrence Levy, Great Britain, world weightlifting champion; 14 world records
- Darío Lecman, Argentina, Pan-American silver
- Grigory Novak, URS, Olympic silver ; world champion
- Igor Rybak, Ukraine/URS, Olympic champion
- Valery Shary, Byelorussia/URS, Olympic champion
- Frank Spellman, US, Olympic champion ; world record; Maccabiah champion
Wrestling
- Louis Baise, South Africa, won gold medals at the 1950 Maccabiah Games and the 1953 Maccabiah Games in Israel. He competed in the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki for South Africa, coming in 6th in the Men's Flyweight, Freestyle.
- Andy Borodow, Canada, Commonwealth games gold medallist
- Lindsey Durlacher, US, world bronze
- Amit Elor, US, 2024 Olympic champion and 8x world champion, at age 18 became the youngest world champion in American free-style wrestling history, and at 20 the youngest Olympic champion
- Grigoriy Gamarnik, Ukraine/URS, world champion, world championship gold and silver
- Samuel Gerson, Ukraine-born US, Olympic silver
- Boris Maksimovich Gurevich, URS, Olympic champion, 2× world champion
- Boris Mikhaylovich Gurevich, URS, Olympic champion, 2× world champion
- Nickolaus "Mickey" Hirschl, Austria, 2× Olympic bronze
- Oleg Karavaev, URS, Olympic champion, 2× world champion
- Károly Kárpáti, Hungary, Olympic champion, silver
- Garry Kallos, Hungary-born Canada, Pan-American champion
- Abraham Kurland, Denmark, Olympic silver
- Len Levy, US, NCAA national champion
- Fred Meyer, US, Olympic bronze
- Fred Oberlander, Austria, Britain, and Canada; world champion ; Maccabiah champion
- Max Ordman, South Africa, competed in the Olympic Games of 1960, Gold 1950 Maccabiah
- Yakov Punkin, URS, Olympic champion
- Samuel Rabin, Great Britain, Olympic bronze
- David Rudman, URS, 6× national wrestling champion and 6× sambo champion, sambo world champion, 2× European judo champion
- Richárd Weisz, Hungary, Olympic champion
- Henry Wittenberg, US, Olympic champion, silver
- Mark Schultz, US, Olympic champion, gold
Jewish sports halls of fame
- International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame
- National [Jewish Sports Hall of Fame and Museum]
- Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame
General works
- ', Bernard Postal, Jesse Silver, Roy Silver, Bloch Pub. Co., 1965
- ', Leible Hershfield, s.n., 1980
- ', Andrew Handler, East European Monographs, 1985,
- ', Harold Uriel Ribalow, Meir Z. Ribalow, Edition 4, Hippocrene Books, 1985,
- ', B. P. Robert Stephen Silverman, Shapolsky Publishers, 1989,
- ', Joseph M. Siegman, SP Books, 1992,
- ', Peter Levine, Oxford University Press US, 1993,
- ', Robert Slater, Jonathan David Publishers, 1993,
- ', Steven A. Riess, Syracuse University Press, 1998,
- ', 3rd Ed, Joseph Siegman, Brassey's, 2000,
- ', B. P. Robert Stephen Silverman, Scarecrow Press, 2003,
- ', Robert Slater, Jonathan David Publishers, 2004,
- ', Jeffrey S. Gurock, Indiana University Press, 2005,
- ', Michael Brenner, Gideon Reuveni, translated by Brenner, Reuveni, U of Nebraska Press, 2006,
- ', David J. Goldman, Edition 2, Kar-Ben Publishing, 2006,
- ', Peter S. Horvitz, Joachim Horvitz, S P I Books, 2007,
- ', Peter S. Horvitz, SP Books, 2007,
- ', Jack Kugelmass, University of Illinois Press, 2007,
- ', Bob Wechsler, KTAV Publishing House, 2008,
- ', Vol. 23 of Studies in Contemporary Jewry, Ezra Mendelsohn, Oxford University Press US, 2009,
Baseball
- ', Harold Uriel Ribalow, Meir Z. Ribalow, Hippocrene Books, 1984,
- ', Erwin Lynn, Shapolsky Publishers, 1986,
- ', Peter S. Horvitz, Joachim Horvitz, SP Books, 2001,
- , Burton Alan Boxerman, Benita W. Boxerman, McFarland, 2006,
- ', Peter S. Horvitz, Joachim Horvitz, Perseus Distribution Services, 2007,
- ', Howard Megdal, Collins, 2009,
- ', Burton Alan Boxerman, Benita W. Boxerman, McFarland, 2010,
- , Larry Ruttman, University of Nebraska Press, 2013,
Boxing
- , Ken Blady, SP Books, 1988,
- When Boxing Was a Jewish Sport, Allen Bodner, Praeger, 1997,
Chess
- , Harold U. Ribalow, Meir Z. Ribalow, Hippocrene Books, 1987,
Olympics
- ', Milly Mogulof, RDR Books, 2002,
- ', Paul Taylor, Sussex Academic Press, 2004,
- , Paul Yogi Mayer, Vallentine Mitchell, 2004,