ENSIKLOPEDIA Cari Tekan Enter untuk memulai pencarian cepat. Kembali ke Ensiklopedia Arsip Wikipedia Indonesia Edward Salas Edward SalasAustralian cyclist Edward SalasPersonal informationFull nameEdward SalasBorn (1965-08-24) 24 August 1965 (age 60)Montevideo, UruguayTeam informationRoleRider Edward Salas (born 24 August 1965) is a former Australian racing cyclist. He won the Australian national road race title in 1993[1] and competed at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, finishing sixth in the men's individual road race.[2] Major results 1987 9th Gran Premio della Liberazione 1988 6th Road race, Olympic Games 1989 1st GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano 3rd Trofeo Matteotti 1990 5th Overall Herald Sun Tour 1991 5th Road race, National Road Championships 1993 1st Road race, National Road Championships 1998 1st Stage 2b Herald Sun Tour 1999 1st Stage 12 Herald Sun Tour References ↑ "Eddy Salas". Cycling Archives. Retrieved 10 May 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) ↑ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Edward Salas". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. External links Edward Salas at Cycling Archives Edward Salas at ProCyclingStats Edward Salas at the Australian Olympic Committee Edward Salas at Olympedia vteAustralian National Road Race Champions (men)1900–1919 Andrew Ralston, NZ (1901) HG O'Callaghan (1902) Jack Arnst, NZ (1903) Tom Larcombe (1904) William Hawley (1905) Hermann Mehrtens, NZ (1906) Tom Larcombe (1907) Matt Chappell (1908) Iddo Munro (1909) Joe Pianto (1910) Phil O'Shea, NZ (1911) 1920–1939 Phil O'Shea, NZ (1922–1923) Hubert Opperman (1924) Harold Smith (1925) Hubert Opperman (1926–1927) Hubert Opperman (1929) Richard Lamb (1930) Matt Lynch (1931) Richard Lamb (1932) Hefty Stuart (1933) Clinton Beasley (1935) Alan Angus (1936–1937) Dean Toseland (1938–1939) 1940–1959 Max Rowley (1946) Jack Bates (1947) Duncan Hunter (1948) Max Rowley (1949) Keith Rowley (1950) John Beasley (1951) Neil Peadon (1952) Alby Saunders (1953) Eddie Smith (1954–1955) Russell Mockridge (1956–1958) Fred Roche (1959) 1960–1979 Fred Roche (1960) Neville Veale (1961) John O'Sullivan (1962) Warwick Dalton (1963) Barry Waddell (1964) Matt Martino (1965) Kerry Hoole (1966) Graeme Gilmore (1967) Barry Waddell (1968) Robert Whetters (1969) Graham McVilly (1970–1971) Kevin Spencer (1972) Kerry Hoole (1973) Graham Rowley (1974) Donald Wilson (1975) Peter Besanko (1976) Donald Wilson (1977) John Trevorrow (1978–1979) 1980–1999 John Trevorrow (1980) Clyde Sefton (1981) Wayne Hildred (1982) Terry Hammond (1983) Peter Besanko (1984) Laurie Venn (1985) Wayne Hildred (1986) Allan Dipple (1987) Paul Miller (1988) Gary Clively (1989) Damian McDonald (1990) Neil Stephens (1991) David McFarlane (1992) Edward Salas (1993) Neil Stephens (1994) Robbie McEwen (1995) Nick Gates (1996) Jonathan Hall (1997) David McKenzie (1998) Henk Vogels (1999) 2000–2019 Jamie Drew (2000) Steve Williams (2001) Robbie McEwen (2002) Stuart O'Grady (2003) Matthew Wilson (2004) Robbie McEwen (2005) Russell Van Hout (2006) Darren Lapthorne (2007) Matthew Lloyd (2008) Peter McDonald (2009) Travis Meyer (2010) Jack Bobridge (2011) Simon Gerrans (2012) Luke Durbridge (2013) Simon Gerrans (2014) Heinrich Haussler (2015) Jack Bobridge (2016) Miles Scotson (2017) Alex Edmondson (2018) Michael Freiberg (2019) 2020–2039 Cameron Meyer (2020–2021) Luke Plapp (2022–2024) Luke Durbridge (2025) Patrick Eddy (2026) This biographical article relating to Australian cycling is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information.vte