It all depends on how your height is distributed. Some guys have long legs, and normal length torsos. Some have long torsos, and normal length legs. Just quoting a standing height doesn't really allow you to compare, as we don't fly these things in the standing position.
Take a look at this
NASA document that defines a large number of
anthropometric measurements. Look at Figure 3.3.1.3-1 (4 of 12) Anthropometric Dimensional Data for American Male. Dimension 758, sitting height, shows that the 5th percentile is 35.0 inches (i.e. 5% have a sitting height of less than 35.0 inches) and a 95% percentile sitting height of 39.2" (95% would have a sitting height of less than 39.2", or 5% would have a sitting height of greater than 39.2"). Note that this range (5% to 95%) only covers 90% of the population. 10% will have measurements outside this range.
The simplest set of relevant measurements are probably your standing height and sitting height (sit on a hard chair, and measure the distance from the seat surface to the top of your head). The difference between your standing height and sitting height is a measure of leg length.
The USAF has an online
anthropometric measurement database. You can enter a range for a particular dimension, and see records of actual measurements of people in that range. For example, 6'1" = 1854 mm. I searched for males with standing heights between 1850 and 1860 mm. 16 records were found, and the sitting heights varied from 922 mm to 1003 mm, or a range of over 3 inches.