Mark Cavendish says that the pressure will be off him in next year’s road world championships in Yorkshire and has also spoken of how the mismanagement of his treatment for Epstein-Barr Virus [EBV] set back his recovery from the condition which has blighted his past two seasons.
The 33-year-old was talking to BBC Sport after undertaking a reconnaissance of the route of next September’s road world championship course, which finishes in Harrogate – his mother’s home town, and where he crashed on the opening stage of the 2014 Tour de France.
The Dimension Data rider, who was racing with Quick Step at the time, had gone into that stage as a strong favourite to take the first yellow jersey of the race.
Much of next year’s parcours follows the route used in the 2014 Grand Depart, but crucially there is a tough circuit covering 90 kilometres over seven laps.
Cavendish, who in Copenhagen in 2011 became only the second Briton after Tom Simpson in 1965 to win the rainbow jersey, said: "Probably without the crash I was dead cert to win the first stage of the Tour de France.
"This is going to be a slightly different dynamic of race. I won't have as much pressure as 2014 when the Tour de France came here.”
The Manxman missed this year’s world championships in Innsbruck-Tirol but contrasted the Yorkshire course with the ones used in the previous three editions, all won by Peter Sagan, with Cavendish runner-up to the Slovak in Qatar in 2016.
“I don't think it's as straightforward as I'd say it was in Qatar or even Richmond [in 2015] or Bergen [2017],” he said.
"It's doable but mainly because of the strength we have now as a nation,” he added. “We have a lot of options to play."
Referring to his illness, he said: "As it wasn't managed properly I've done myself more and more damage, but I seem to be training all right and it's behind me now, hopefully."
It’s the second time he has been diagnosed with the strength-sapping condition.
"I'm all right I think now but you never know with Epstein Barr," he explained.
"A broken bone – you know when you'll be back. Even most illnesses you know that.
"But it takes a real expert to understand EBV and when you're through it," he added.
Yeah, that peak looks reall… oh wait, you didn't bother adding a picture of the helmet with the lauded peak attached. Or the peak itself. Or anyone...
Excellent example of someone washing their hands of a problem they refuse to face good job.
Geraint rode a fantastic TT, there was nothing else he could have done. Roglic was just on another level to everyone else that day. He just had ...
Potato potaatoe. Sounds like you'll use any trivial point to avoid facing up to the fact that the world and sport is a complicated place.
So are you for or against inclusion of people into categories into which a subset have an innate sex-based performance benefit then?
A pathetic fine for a recidivist road criminal.
Probably quite a few, but not many with high media profiles.
It looked like Ackermann was trying to cut across Milan (who had already given up) to get onto the riders behind Cav, clipped Milan's front wheel...
Sounds to me like they're getting ripped off. People have thrown together Raspberry Pi hardware along with a camera (there's some excellent camera...
I concur GP4000 is the hardest I've ever had to mount on a rim, Ultegra wheelset in my case. Shifted the outer skin on my thumbs!...