Ibrahim Rojas
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's canoe sprint | ||
Olympic Games | ||
2000 Sydney | C-2 1000 m | |
2004 Athens | C-2 500 m | |
World Championships | ||
2001 Poznań | C-2 500 m | |
2002 Seville | C-2 200 m | |
2002 Seville | C-2 500 m | |
1999 Milan | C-2 1000 m | |
2002 Seville | C-2 1000 m | |
2001 Poznań | C-2 200 m | |
2001 Poznań | C-2 1000 m | |
2003 Gainesville | C-2 500 m | |
Pan American Games | ||
2003 Santo Domingo | C-2 500 m | |
2003 Santo Domingo | C-2 1000 m |
Ibrahim Rojas Blanco (born October 10, 1975, in Santa Cruz del Sur, Camagüey) is a Cuban sprint canoeist who competed from the late 1990s to the mid-2000s.
In 2001 he and partner Leobaldo Pereira won Cuba's first-ever world championship gold medal. In all Rojas won three world titles and was Pan American champion four times. He also won silver medals at both the Sydney and Athens Olympics.
All his medals came in the two-man (C-2) Canadian canoe discipline, first with Pereira and later with Ledis Balceiro. Rojas would win eight world championship medals in his career.
References
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships – Part 1: flatwater (now sprint): 1936–2007 at the Wayback Machine (archived 2010-01-05)
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships – Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines: 1936–2007 at WebCite (archived 2009-11-09)
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Ibrahim Rojas". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2011-08-26.
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- 1994: Belarus (Aleksandr Maseikov & Dmitri Dovgalenok)
- 1995: Hungary (György Kolonics & Csaba Horváth)
- 1997: Germany (Thomas Zereske & Christian Gille)
- 1998: Germany (Thomas Zereske & Christian Gille)
- 1999: Russia (Konstantin Fomichev & Aleksandr Artemida)
- 2001: Poland (Paweł Baraszkiewicz & Daniel Jędraszko)
- 2002: Cuba (Ibrahim Rojas & Ledis Balceiro)
- 2003: Poland (Paweł Baraszkiewicz & Daniel Jędraszko)
- 2005: Russia (Evgeny Ignatov & Nikolay Lipkin)
- 2006: Russia (Evgeny Ignatov & Ivan Shtyl)
- 2007: Russia (Evgeny Ignatov & Ivan Shtyl)
- 2009: Lithuania (Tomas Gadeikis & Raimundas Labuckas)
- 2010: Lithuania (Raimundas Labuckas & Tomas Gadeikis)
- 2011: Lithuania (Raimundas Labuckas & Tomas Gadeikis)
- 2013: Germany (Robert Nuck & Stefan Holtz)
- 2014: Russia (Alexey Korovashkov & Ivan Shtyl)
- 2015: Russia (Alexey Korovashkov & Ivan Shtyl)
- 2017: Russia (Ivan Shtyl & Alexander Kovalenko)
- 2018: Belarus (Hleb Saladukha & Dzianis Makhlai)
- 2019: Spain (Alberto Pedrero & Pablo Graña)
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This article about a Cuban Olympic medalist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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