The German Sunweb rider reflects on a career spent entirely on one team
I’ve spent my professional career on this team.
I was a stagiaire for Milram, but when the Gerolsteiner team folded [at the end of 2008] Milram took a lot of riders and they told me early I wouldn’t get a contract. Through a friend of a friend I sent the Skil-Shimano manager, Iwan Spekenbrink, my CV and he got in touch. They saw my results, that I’d had a good Tour de l’Avenir and Giro delle Regioni and they were really interested. Looking back, it was a good match. I met Iwan at the World Championships and one week later I signed.
When I started, the team was really, really small.
There was no bus like the other teams, only a camper, but for me, coming from the amateurs, it was already pretty special.
In 2009 I did the Tour de France as a neo-pro.
The team got a wildcard for the Tour and my longest race before then had been the Tour de l’Avenir. I didn’t do Paris-Nice or the Dauphiné because we didn’t have a wildcard. In fact my only WorldTour-level races before were Flèche-Wallonne and Liège.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Summit Ambition
With nine summit finishes and a testing third week, is the Vuelta the year's toughest grand tour, once again?
ZDENĔK ŠTYBAR
The Quick-Step Floors' Classics specialist on cars, climbs and Belgian fans
Mathieu Burgaudeau
The French teenager at Vendée U has already caught the eye of Direct Énergie
Jasper Philipsen
The 19-year-old Belgian won six races in his first year at U23 level, including a stage of the Baby Giro Six wins. That sounds impressive.
Richie Porte
The 2017 Pre-Tour favourite recalls the journey back to racing after his stage 9 horror crash
Greg Van Avermaet - On Top Of The World
The 2017 season saw Greg Van Avermaet finally clinch a debut monument, amid a run of major spring wins that helped propel him to the top of the WorldTour ranking. Procycling met the Belgian Classics king at his home to find out what's next.
Down Under UPS Its Game
What to expect from the Australian WorldTour season opener
Ryan Mullen
Trek's new Irish TT specialist on why the café run should be a bike-talk free zone
Dani Rowe
The Olympic gold medallist on how the track has influenced her road racing
Danny Van Poppel
Lot toNL's Dutch sprinter on his best and worst grand tours and crashing on the cobbles