Yeah it’s difficult to say why I was dominant and that kind of racer.You start and then after a couple of years you feel that you have more of a chance. For long distance races and harder races like Flanders and Roubaix, you make your training program for these races. My generation was thinking that they have to do six or seven hours every day. Now, it’s totally different. Now, they train with power meters and everything is new. There is more research about what is better for them.
Now they know, even as a junior, whether they can be a Paris Roubaix winner or a Tour de France winner, or a climber, or a sprinter. I was more of a Classics rider and I was better after five hours than at the beginning, so that means that long distance was good for me.I have a lot of muscles like Tom Boonen and he has the same structure, and Cancellara as well. We were very good cobble riders. I liked cobbles, and I still like cobbles, and I like bad weather, so I was the perfect Flandrien.
In my generation, we had a lot of good riders and famous riders and I can talk about many riders, but I have to talk now about Andrei Tchmil. He was a tough rider, a hard rider, he was a Russian rider so he was a little bit more special than the other riders.At the beginning he wasn’t my friend and I remember the battle in Roubaix. He was in the breakaway, and I was chasing him behind. And I was chasing him a couple kilometers, with almost one hour between five and eight seconds behind him, and I couldn’t reach him. It was impossible to overtake him. So then somebody had to say it’s over and it was my day to say it’s over. That day, Andrei Tchmil won Paris Roubaix. He is now a friend of mine, but during my career we were rivals. He was a very tough and hard man, and someone who has done a lot for cycling. For me Andrei Tchmil, and all the others.