"During the first conversations, it became clear that bringing a trainer along wasn't an option. I had to think about that for a while. I started working with Koen [Pelgrim] in the summer of 2018. We worked together for a long time and achieved fantastic results. But maybe now's the time, if I want to develop further, to look for someone else who can help me improve in certain aspects."
With the Giro d'Italia route being unvealed tomorrow, we will learn more about Evenepoel's ambitions. If he races the Giro, then he will have a more reduced spring calendar. If he does not, then we should see him at Milano-Sanremo and Tour of Flanders before aiming for his traditional goals.
It is an interesting proposition, and one that should be answered within the next few days. But the
Tour de France is never in question, as long as he has his health: "There's a 99% chance I'll be at the start". Evenepoel also explained what went wrong at last year's edition, where he started off strong, but later on cracked in the Pyrenees with several bad days in a row - eventually abandoning the race.
"That broken rib at the Belgian Championships was a minor issue, but the training sessions that weren't going as planned were difficult," he explains. "I had to quit every interval training session after five, six, or seven minutes, while I should have been doing a block of fifteen or twenty minutes".
This certainly limited his form, but it was the feeling he got entering the key days of the Tour that really made an impact. "At some point, I got that severe fatigue again. I slept poorly and had no appetite. And then it's ruined in a Grand Tour." At the time the overall feeling of fatigue was evident as he fell through the group of favourites on the Col du Tourmalet, where he ended his Tour.