Medal record | ||
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Representing ![]() |
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Cycling (HC B) | ||
Paralympic Games | ||
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2008 Beijing | Individual Time Trial |
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2008 Beijing | Individual Road Race |
Edward Maalouf (born December 11, 1968 in Hadath, Beqaa Valley, Lebanon) is a Lebanese competitive handcyclist, and the only person to have won medals for Lebanon at the Paralympic Games.
In 1995, while at work, he fell from the sixth floor of a building in Beyrouth, and was left paraplegic. In 1997, he began to train in disability sport. In 2006, he won the handycle marathon in New York City. In 2007, he won silver in the disability cycling world championships in Bordeaux. Later that same year, he won the European Handbike circuit, and the Beyrouth handcycle marathon.
Maalouf won the international handcycle marathon again in 2008, and came third in 2009 after rupturing a tyre and having to spend about two minutes replacing it.
In 2008, he took part for the first time in the Paralympic Games in Beijing. This was Lebanon's second participation in the Games. Its first, in 2000, had been disappointing. Lebanon had been represented by two sprinters in athletics (T44 category). One, Hussein Ghandour, had been a non-starter in the men's 400m race, while the other, Mahmoud Habbal, had failed to finish his race in the 800m. Lebanon was absent from the 2004 Summer Paralympics, and sent Maalouf as its only competitor to the Beijing Games. To prepare himself, Maalouf underwent intensive training in the Netherlands, and was accompanied by two Dutch coaches in Beijing. He was, unsurprisingly, his country's flag bearer during the opening ceremony.
He competed in two events: the time trial and the road race, both in category HC B - B being "for athletes with complete loss of lower limb function and limited trunk stability". In the time trial, he was one of fifteen competitors, and finished third with a time of 22:12.91 - 0.85 seconds behind Vittorio Podesta of Italy. Heinz Frei of Switzerland won gold in 22:06.23. Maalouf had thus won his country's first Paralympic medal. In the road race, he was again one of fifteen competitors, and again won the bronze medal. His time of 1:28:26 was just one second behind Heinz Frei's winning time (1:28:25), and was identical (within a second) to that of silver medallist Max Weber (of Germany).