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When the rolls out on August 22, it will have a star-studded roster, including all three podium finishers from the Tour de France. One week ahead of the race, and his girlfriend were staying in Steamboat, Colorado, where the three-time Tour de France runner-up was preparing for the upcoming race. On Monday morning, Schleck showed up for a , and though the appearance was announced only that morning, several hundred cycling fans turned out to ride with the star. Later that afternoon, Schleck sat down with me to talk about the Tour de France, doping in cycling, and his expectations for the Pro Cycling Challenge.
–Aaron Gulley
OUTSIDE: That was a big crowd this morning. Would that many people show up to ride with you in Europe?
SCHLECK: I don’t think so, actually. In Luxembourg cycling is very common. I was really, really surprised there was that many people this morning. I know how a peloton looks with 200 people—that’s usually what we ride in—and this morning I just looked back down the road and I was really surprised there were that many. I make a wild guess, but I would say there were maybe 400 or 500 people.
Where’s Frank?
He’s back in Luxembourg with his family. I called him to tell him that he was really missing out. I didn’t expect it to be so beautiful. I might even buy a house here.
What’s it like being on a team with your brother?
As long as I ride, we will never ride for different teams. We grew up together and we are really close, more than normal brothers I would say. Even outside of cycling we spend a lot of time together. We are competitive, but not in the races. If we go fishing, then there’s a competition. Whatever we do, even in training it’s a competition. But in training we have a gentleman’s agreement that I won’t drop him and he won’t drop me. In races, we ride on the same team and most of the time we have one leader, either it’s him or it’s me, and I don’t mind. Of course there are races you do when you like to be the leader, but sometimes it’s nice to race and to just do your work without the big pressure. I’m just as happy when Frank wins a race as when I do.
One criticism of the approach of your teams is that because of your and Frank’s competing interests as co-leaders, you haven’t been able to get the top results. How do you respond?
I completely disagree. I think our strength in the big races is the fact that we are two. For example in 2010 I was alone, and I think that’s what cost me the Tour. Alberto could control me; he could take care of one. But if we were two, it would have been totally different. We could have attacked earlier, like what we did this year on the Izoard. If I’d been alone, Alberto would have followed me. But on the Izoard the others said, “If we go after him now, Frank will be next to attack.” And I think that, in the end, is what helped make our race.
On Stage 18 of this year's Tour, when you attacked on the Izoard and went on to gain two minutes and 15 seconds over Cadel, that was probably the most dangerous moment of the Tour. Do you think Cadel and Alberto miscalculated when they let you ride away on the Izoard?
Up to that point the Tour was hard, but I could see that there weren’t many stages where we could make big time differences. So four or five stages earlier, I was looking at the stage up the Izoard and the Galibier, and I decided to try something because I didn’t want to ride into Paris and feel like I hadn’t tried everything. Yes, they miscalculated. But I didn’t miscalculate. I did that stage in training twice, and I knew that if I rode way in the front, it’s the leaders who would have to chase me down. The gregarios, they can’t chase me down on that terrain because I can ride faster than them. If I’m in front and I’m hurting like hell, then it's up to Alberto and Cadel to ride and catch me. Unfortunately, it didn’t work to the end. Sure I got a nice stage win and the day after I took yellow. But the big goal was to win, and I didn’t in the end.
Tell me about the final TT. How do you stay calm as you line up knowing that you’re the underdog against Evans?
You go in there, you do your warm-up…it’s like a list on the day of a time trial, you just have to do everything in order and if you do it all right and in order to get ready, then there’s no concern of getting nervous. I knew that Cadel was a better time trialist, but I believed that I could do it. In training in the morning I didn’t feel good because I had the Galibier stage, which was very hard, still in my legs. And then straight after, the Alpe d’Huez stage, which was a short stage but from the beginning I was up front with Alberto. Then we slept on Alpe d’Huez, which is not the best recovery, sleeping at altitude after two hard stages. In the end the time trial, you just have to go to the limit of your pain…I think I did a good time trial. I came 15th or something on the stage [Editor: Schleck finished the TT in 17th, 2:38 behind Evans], but Cadel was just flying that day.
Will you focus on improving your time trialing in the future?
I am not a specialist in the time trial. I have worked a lot in it. I think I have improved a lot in it. But no matter what I do I know that I’ll never beat Fabian Cancellara in the time trial. And I also know that I will never win the Tour in the time trial. If I want to win the Tour, I have to win it with my strengths, and that’s climbing. So in the future I’m still more focused on improving my climbing.
Leopard Trek came into the season with the goal of winning the Tour de France. Does the team look at second and third place as a failure?
To be second and third in the classics like Fabian and then second and third in the Tour, maybe it isn’t a question of who’s the strongest but a question of luck or no luck. But it’s the first year for the team and it’s been a great year so far. We’re leading the team rankings in the WorldTour standings.
You’ve gone second three years running.
Frustrating, yeah…? [Schleck laughs.]
In light of that, do you still believe that you can win the Tour?
Yes, of course. I’m getting every year closer. This year I was standing on the podium in Paris, and I was happy. If I do my maximum like I did this year, I cannot do more than that. I trained and my shape was at the maximum. I had no regrets before; I did a really good preparation. At the Tour, these are the best riders in the world. I just have to accept that someone was better. This year it was Cadel, but I'll go again next year to the Tour and maybe it will be me. In French we say, “Jamais deux san trois.” [Editor: This French idiom translates approximately to the English expression, “Bad things always come in threes.”] I’m not totally stressed to win the Tour. I would like to win it once, and I’m 26 so I think I have all the time ahead of me.