Mark Cavendish: Never Enough (2023)

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Mark Cavendish: Never Enough (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

I'm down at the Scottish Provident

site in Crickley.

I'm going to talk to a few

of the seven to eight-year-olds.

The first person I'm gonna talk to

is Mark Turton.

What's the season been like for you?

Quite good.

But I've had a few crashes here and there.

[reporter] Down here

we have Joseph Dooley.

He's in the under sixes.

Joseph, what are you going...

No, I'm seven.

Oh, you're seven? [Laughs]

Right, now we come to the really fast man.

And he's Mark Cavendish.

Mark is going

to the Scottish Provident Challenge '96.

How do you think your form's going, Mark?

- Okay.

- Okay.

How are you going tonight?

Okay. I did better than I thought I would.

- Did you win, or were you second?

- No, I was about that far.

Christian won,

as he keeps saying. [Chuckles]

Okay, well, Mark's going to Challenge '96.

Thank you.

We'll let them get on with the race,

they're just about to start

and the first line is off.

[upbeat music playing]

[commentator 1] A world champion at 21.

[people cheering]

[commentator 2] Mark Cavendish,

youngest British rider

to get a stage win at the Tour de France.

[commentator 3] He is the fastest man

in the world right now.

There's nobody even comparing.

[commentator 1] There's the m*ssile.

[commentator 2] 70 km/h, what a sprint.

[commentator 1] He has got the big dream.

No British cyclist

has ever been remotely close.

Win number 25.

[commentator] Already,

he's taken the third most victories

in Tour de France history.

[reporter] From perfection,

where do you go?

What a way to stick it to everyone else.

- [indistinct chatter]

- f*ck off.

Is this live?

- [man] Yeah.

- Oh, sorry.

[commentator] Cavendish has been

disqualified from today's sprint.

You know that little thing in your mind

that says, "I shouldn't really do that."

[commentator] Oh, Mark Cavendish is down.

[reporter] Mark, how are you feeling?

[man 2] We get a lot of questions

about Mark Cavendish.

[man 2] He hasn't got it anymore.

[woman] The harder things got,

the less he talked to anyone.

[man 3] Stop cycling

and start a different life.

You don't go from

being the best in the world

To nothing.

[people shouting]

I'd been many years

Just a winning machine.

[man in French] The m*ssile

of the Isle of Man, Mark Cavendish.

[woman cheering]

[in English] Without the Tour de France,

cycling doesn't exist.

Even before I rode the Tour de France,

I was obsessed with it.

These bike riders suffering

all these incredible distances

for three weeks in July.

[indistinct announcement on PA]

It's addictive. It's

It's savage, but so beautiful.

So beautiful.

[indistinct chatter]

We race 21 individual stages

over 3,500 kilometers.

A rider wins one stage

of the Tour de France,

it makes their whole career.

Not just their year, their whole career.

One stage.

At this point in my career,

I'd been racing ten years.

I'd won 26 stages.

- [helicopter hovering]

- [whistle blows]

[announcer in French] Here is one of

the superstar international sprinters,

Mark Cavendish!

[cheers and applause]

[inaudible]

[Peta Cavendish]

It's just like a complete circus.

It's carnage.

[man] That's so cool. All done.

I try to make it as much as

an adventure as I can for the kids.

When I met Mark, I was a model,

and the photographer we were with said,

"Do you know that

he's a really good cyclist?"

And I was like, "Well, brilliant."

I'd never watched a bike race in my life.

Cycling's really quite a confusing sport.

But I realized what a huge part

of Mark's life this was.

So if I wanted to understand Mark,

I had to understand cycling.

[inaudible]

You have to have tunnel vision.

You have to be able

to block out all the noise,

all the distraction,

and focus 100% on what you need.

I had my trusted teammate Bernie Eisel

who'd been with me most of my career.

You put your life in people's hands.

You have to trust they're

gonna give you everything they have.

You see his emotions

and he says he's nervous,

so the last thing I should be,

is to be nervous.

We were like a married couple.

We have spent probably 180 days

per year in a hotel room together.

Bernie Eisel.

The best looking man

in the history

of cycling.

We definitely saw each other

more than we saw our wives.

[whispers] Bernie?

Do you think we should get up?

[Bernie snores]

- [indistinct chatter]

- [scattered applause]

[announcer] The race is underway.

3,535 kilometers between

the peloton and Paris in the final.

[Bernie] Cav is a sprinter.

Paired with athletics,

you have a marathon runner.

You have a 100-meter sprinter.

Cav has to do both

over three and a half weeks.

[crowd cheering]

You've got 180 best bike riders

in the world.

Everything's at just another level.

[people cheering]

[man groans]

[commentator] There's been a fall.

Contador is down.

Contador, battered and bruised.

[Peta] The pressure's high.

Everyone's nervous. There's often crashes.

Everyone's going to go all g*ns blazing.

Everyone wants that chance

at the yellow jersey.

[Mark] The yellow jersey is worn by

the leader of the race overall.

It was really quite rare

for a sprinter to be able to get it.

I hadn't worn the yellow jersey

at the Tour de France.

It's about the only thing I hadn't done.

This year's my chance, you know.

[commentator] Mark Cavendish

might have a problem here.

f*cking prick!

Shake of the head

as that motorbike went past.

Looking for the team car

for a bike change.

Problems for Dimension Data.

Hoping to get Cavendish back

to the top of the podium

as a stage winner.

[Bernie] My job was always to keep Cav

in a safe spot in the peloton

through the whole race.

You have to protect him.

Shelter him from the wind.

Make sure there's nothing

that makes him crash.

Get him to the front,

drop him off at 180 meters to go.

The only thing he has to do is head down

and sprint

as fast as he can to the finish line.

[commentator] Going so fast.

They're over a kilometer to go now.

And then there was this big,

long straight finish slightly uphill.

But the speed we were doing

was phenomenal.

[commentator] Cav going towards

the sprint finish now, riding at 65 km/h.

There's a big crash just behind!

Spearing up through the center,

it's Peter Sagan.

He wants a piece of today as well.

[Peta] Mark wasn't really anywhere.

And all you could hear in the commentary

was, "Kittel, Kittel, Peter Sagan."

[commentator]

Peter Sagan comes through the line!

Peter Sagan, the world champion!

I was coming,

and the line's coming,

felt Kittel on my left

[commentator] Cavendish comes

from absolutely nowhere.

The Manx m*ssile!

Yes! He takes it!

He gets the yellow jersey! He nails it!

- Wow, Mark Cavendish! You beauty!

- [cheering]

I just remember us all screaming

and cheering and Frey bursting into tears

'cause we'd all screamed so loud

that it scared

the absolute life out of him.

- What a sprint.

- Well done, Cavendish!

Well done!

Good on you, mate. Well done.

[announcer] Well, he's the center of the

world's attention again, Mark Cavendish.

Justifiably so.

[man in French] It's Mark Cavendish

putting the yellow jersey on.

[Peta in English] It's very rare

for the sprinters to wear it.

It isn't normally something that

Mark would get the opportunity to go for.

[man in French] Look how happy he is.

He's never worn this jersey,

and he's wearing it today.

[Mark in English] It was incredible.

This is the most iconic item

of clothing in sport.

I'd done everything else I could do,

I'd never worn one.

[cheers and applause]

[commentator] This victory moves Cavendish

one step closer to b*ating Eddy Merckx's

all-time record of stage wins.

[Peta] All of a sudden,

everybody starts with this narrative of,

"Is Mark going to break

Eddy Merckx's record?"

[commentator] Mark Cavendish

makes it win number 28.

- [indistinct chatter]

- I can't believe it!

[Bernie] The great Eddy Merckx,

I mean, he's just a legend.

Breaking the historic record

of Eddy Merckx

was somewhere in the clouds in our heads.

[commentator] Cavendish gets there!

Win number 29. He's closing in on Merckx.

The thing with Eddy Merckx's record,

I never started that. That wasn't me.

All of a sudden, it's all I'm going for.

[commentator]

Four stage wins this year.

Will Cavendish return in 2017

and claim that record?

f*ck.

[sighs] Like, people had always

only talked about Merckx.

Now I've got to b*at Merckx.

For f*ck's sake.

It doesn't matter who I b*at.

I'll b*at everyone.

[all yelling]

- [indistinct announcement on PA]

- [people cheering]

[Bernie] Good luck, man.

You going to time it,

or do you want me to?

[Bernie] Yeah.

[Mark] I always need

to be doing something

that keeps your hands busy, really.

I think my record is at 1 minute 20.

[groans]

If I don't get it under two minutes

then I'm usually upset.

Yeah, he's definitely obsessive

with many things.

Starting to get stressed now.

[Bernie] He needs control.

Like a nervous tick.

[Mark] Uh There we go, stop.

To freak him out,

I would just leave a cupboard open.

Just leave it open.

Just wait 'til he explodes.

Everything was to perfection.

And that's how he worked.

That's how he became

the best sprinter in the world.

It can be definitely one of those aspects

that really brings you to the top.

But it also can break you.

'Cause it's a lot of pressure

that you build up to yourself.

The whole of the team was built around me.

You feel that pressure.

[cheers and applause]

[commentator] Even one stage victory

will take him so close

to Eddy Merckx's all-time record

in the Tour de France.

Mark's on 30. And Merckx is on 34.

- [air horn blaring]

- [people cheering]

[Mark] It's f*cking noisy.

There's helicopters.

Motorbikes.

Crowds.

- There's riders shouting at each other.

- [riders shouting]

A wall of noise

and you have to try and focus.

[commentator] This is where

the drive has to come,

but where is Mark Cavendish?

He's about two or three riders

back at the moment.

Get him forward then sprint to the line.

[commentator] 400 meters to go.

There's Sagan, now pushing.

Cavendish trying to force

a gap on the right.

Oh, he hits a barrier!

[people shouting]

[high-pitched ringing]

That was a violent crash

for Mark Cavendish.

[indistinct chatter]

[commentator] And that looks deliberate.

[indistinct shouting]

In the bus, I see that injured athlete,

and I see the replay and I see how he

He comes from behind

and I see that Mark would have won.

What would you put

someone into the barriers for?

Doing 70 km/h.

[Rolf] There was no other scenario

than him winning that stage

if he doesn't crash there.

[Mark] 100% I'd win that stage.

100%.

[Rolf] You immediately

get into this angry mode.

I posted the only tweet

I ever tweeted in my life, kind of like,

"Pure v*olence. Let's see what UCI

is going to do about it."

[indistinct chatter]

We decided to disqualify

Peter Sagan from Tour de France 2017

as he endangered

some of his colleagues seriously.

For sure I don't agree with them

because I think I didn't

do something wrong.

Mark, how are you feeling?

Peter Sagan's been disqualified

from the Tour, what's your reaction?

It's the first I've heard of it. Um.

I don't know.

The jury will do what they do, um

I was a little bit confused

with the elbow, in a way.

That's something I'd like

to speak to him about anyway.

[man] Thanks, Mark.

[indistinct chatter]

[commentator] The Tour is now without

it's greatest ever sprinter,

and the world champion.

[Mark] f*cking raging.

I nearly lost my finger.

Got a hole in my shoulder blade.

[indoor cycle ticking]

[breathing heavily]

[Peta] Mark wasn't good.

He was really struggling

with the crash in particular.

[Mark] I felt like

I had jet lag, you know.

Tired. Just all the time tired.

He would sit down

and be asleep in a second.

He would walk to the top of the stairs

and would fall asleep.

I said to

Doctor, "Sorry, something's not right."

"I need to get a blood test this week."

[Peta] And we got a text message

from the team doctor,

"Cav, you've got Epstein-Barr."

I was like, "What's Epstein-Barr?"

Turns out it's quite common

in endurance athletes.

It can tip very easily

into chronic fatigue.

Irreversible chronic fatigue.

There's no medicine

that can make it better.

Only rest.

It could wipe out half a season.

I had about six weeks off the bike.

But I wanted to race.

- [helicopter hovering]

- [people cheering]

[intense music playing]

[Rolf] Was he ready for Sanremo?

Even if he wasn't in great shape,

he could still pull something off

just out of his talent.

[Peta] I'm at home

with the kids, watching.

50K to go, still there.

20K to go, still there.

And I'm thinking,

"He could maybe do this."

[commentator 1] Mark Cavendish giving

himself a very good opportunity here.

- We've got a crash!

- [commentator 2] Whoa!

[commentator 1] Dimension Data rider

down there on the right-hand side.

It's Mark Cavendish down at the back.

[commentator 2]

He hit the yellow bollard.

[indistinct chatter]

[Peta] The kids are like,

"Is he all right?"

So I took them into the other room,

and when I came back

he was still on the floor.

[commentator 1] Here it is on

the right-hand side, Mark Cavendish.

- [commentator 2] Oh, my God.

- Oh, no! Oh, no!

[commentator 2] That's horrible.

[commentator 1] And that is something

we do not need to see.

- [commentator 2] God. Yeah.

- [commentator 1] We hope he's okay.

I'd seen enough crashes with Mark

to know that that was a long time

that he hadn't got up.

He sounded scared,

and he said, "Girl, I can't feel my legs."

Yeah, it's terrifying.

Man, it's terrifying.

My heel was f*cked.

My knee was f*cked.

My hip was f*cked.

Like, I couldn't walk.

The crash was odd because,

I mean, Mark did do Sanremo

so many times before.

He knows he has to take that roundabout.

It didn't make any sense to me.

I just couldn't make sense

of how he'd hit a traffic island.

[Lance] Mark Cavendish

had another major crash.

It's kinda indescribable

the way he hit that barrier

and literally launched.

Like he was in the f*cking Olympics.

I gave it a ten.

- [chuckles]

- I gave it a ten.

[Rolf] The media picks up.

Suddenly he was too old

and his reaction time wouldn't be

good enough anymore,

and he should probably stop.

[interviewer] Do you start

to get a reputation

as a guy that goes down,

to stay away from?

[man] Yeah, absolutely.

"Don't ride behind that guy." [chuckles]

It was like, "Shut the f*ck up."

"You don't know what you're on about."

Ten years before,

people were saying I was finished.

Ten years.

[pensive music playing]

The media and him both treated each other

with an equal level of contempt.

He felt like they were trying

to trip him up all the time.

[reporter] Was it your fault, Mark?

- Was what my fault?

- [reporter] The crash.

Why are you taking my tape recorder?

What was my fault, that I lost the sprint?

Yeah, it was my fault.

He never had any media training.

[reporter] Can you be certain you're

in good enough shape for the Tour?

Can you tell me 100% that one of these

journalists isn't f*cking your wife?

Could be forgiven for thinking that

maybe he was a bit of a d*ck.

Oh! Ally! Can you get him away please?

f*ck off.

We are here.

[Mark] I feel I've got a right

to have a chip on my shoulder.

It's f*cking horrible.

I use that to win whatever I can win.

I'd had this thing since I was young

that I wanted to be world champion.

[commentator] Who will win

the Championship of 2011?

Cavendish has to deliver.

[Mark] Put all your chips in the center.

That's how I do it.

Either win or f*cking don't win.

[commentator] Cavendish on one side

of the road, Greipel on the other.

And Cavendish,

is he going to get there on the throne?

What a finish!

Mark Cavendish is the World

Road Race Champion!

What a perfect result!

[cheering]

[Mark] I did it.

World Champion.

I always feel that I have to fight.

Of course, I'm still having

to prove myself,

having to fight.

Casper was born that May.

And, uh, that was super nice.

[Peta] He's always had to leave quite soon

after we've had the babies.

And I remember sitting in the kitchen

with Casper, and him leaving.

And Casper was,

I don't know, a few days old.

A week old, maybe.

And I remember crying when he left.

Three days after Casper was born,

I left to go.

I was on my own then

until the Tour de France.

I train more.

I get more tired.

I'm not improving at all.

My numbers aren't getting better.

So the way to compensate that

is to get lighter.

[Peta] I've seen him skinny

a couple of times, you know.

But this was a little bit different.

I started eating less and less,

like, I wasn't

I didn't eat anything.

I stopped eating. [Chuckles]

The addictive part was, it was the

The losing weight, I could see, rapidly,

how quickly I was losing weight.

[breathing heavily]

And it was the first improvement I'd seen

in anything, for a long time.

One day, I went for dinner with a friend.

I didn't eat that much, but I, like

You know when you

You're like Oh!

And then you get a bit of saliva

and that in your mouth,

like a bit wet feeling,

and then you know the only way

is to just make yourself sick.

It was It

[breathing heavily]

- [horn honking]

- [people cheering]

[Lance] We get a lot of questions

from listeners

and viewers about Mark Cavendish.

His form's totally questionable.

Cavendish is just coming

off this bout with

With Epstein-Barr, chronic fatigue,

and we're talking about him

trying to break Eddy's record,

which isn't going to happen.

[Bernie] Team management, media,

riders, teammates,

everyone was like,

"Okay, is he doing enough?"

"Is he still hungry enough?"

[indistinct chatter]

[man] The pressure

on this race is immense,

and having all the sponsors

and the partners around

comes with big responsibilities.

Everybody wants you to be successful.

[Mark] The sponsors want a return

on their investment.

And there's 70 people whose jobs

rely on that, you know?

We're trying to go

to 34 stages with Mark Cavendish,

and b*at Eddy Merckx's record.

[people cheering]

We had a one-leader strategy

and you base everything on Mark.

[commentator] They fully believe

the Manx m*ssile

can get stage win number 31.

Things weren't great,

but I put the work in.

Things had to come good

from putting the work in, you know.

f*cking move!

No. Go, go, go!

[man in Italian] Close the gap!

[Peta yelling]

[man in Italian]

What the f*ck is he doing?

[in English] Kick!

- [indistinct commentary]

- [indistinct chatter]

[Peta] He's out. He's gone.

[indistinct chatter]

[commentator] Mark Cavendish just doesn't

have the legs at the moment.

His legs aren't doing

what they used to do.

- [Lance] Cav flinched.

- [man] Mmm-hmm.

Mark Cavendish seven years ago

never would have.

He would have been like,

"I'm running through the brick wall."

He didn't care, but he does now.

I don't know what's wrong with it. f*ck!

No, don't move it.

[Lance] It was like he was spooked.

I think his time has come and gone.

And I love Mark Cavendish,

he's a good bud.

He doesn't have the head

or the mentality for it.

[Doug] This is our worst season

we've ever had.

And we've only won five races this year.

This time last year we'd won 20 by now.

At the moment, we're a sinking ship.

Even myself, I said, "Cav, we still know

you're one of the quickest guys there,

but with the form,

with the shape you're in at the moment,

we can't get you to the finish line."

[indistinct chatter]

[Mark] We were called

to a meeting that night.

Doug starts off with,

"I'm getting it

in the neck from the sponsors."

"We're not anywhere near it,

and this isn't good enough."

And I'm like,

"Doug, all the stuff you're saying,

you're the one that signed the contract."

"Don't put that on us."

"We're doing our best."

And he didn't like me saying that.

And he stormed off the bus.

You called the f*cking meeting.

Uh, arguments

It definitely became toxic there.

- [helicopter hovering]

- [people cheering]

[commentator] It might be short,

but it's brutal.

And it is littered with huge climbs.

Fear for the sprinters

just trying to survive.

[Bernie] Cav is a sprinter.

He hates climbing.

We got to the mountains.

I suffered every day.

Had no power.

[commentator] There he is, Mark Cavendish,

at the back of the race.

And under real thr*at

of elimination today.

[Bernie] Every stage has a time cut.

And missing the time cut,

I think that was for Cav

always the biggest fear.

This would put him out of the Tour.

[Mark panting]

And I'd never been eliminated

from the Tour de France in my career.

Never had I been out of time.

[indistinct commentary on TV]

[Mark] I'd given everything to be there.

I'd just left my three-day-old boy.

[Peta] I knew what he'd sacrificed.

I knew that both of us cried

when he left that day.

Any rider coming across the finish line

now is outside the official time cut-off.

And Mark Cavendish is still on the road.

I never just stopped, you know,

and I wasn't about to.

I just wanted to finish.

[indistinct announcement]

[commentator] Mark Cavendish

is showing his courage,

and his class, by pushing on.

- [indistinct Italian commentary]

- [people cheering]

[man 1] Cav just came across

the line an hour back.

- [man 2] Come on. Oof.

- Yeah, that's rough.

- Sad to see. Wish him the best.

- [man 2] He is a sweetheart, but

[indistinct chatter]

When the f*cking chips are down

[man] Would you call this rock bottom?

Yeah.

Think so.

[chuckles] Oh, f*ck.

[Rolf] If you think rationally,

you think that the human body

starts to decrease in performance

at the age of what, 30, 35?

Maybe it's a moment, maybe it's time.

[Bernie] What it hurt him

the most to fail, myself too, is like

Every stage win, tough ones,

great stages he'd won, were forgotten.

[Mark] It was a special day.

I've got goosebumps now, you know.

I had fire in my eyes that day. Fire.

[people cheering]

[commentator] Bradley Wiggins, winner

of the Tour de France is going to lead

onto the final turn of the Champs-lyses.

It doesn't get better than this.

[Mark] I mean, Bradley Wiggins,

we were like brothers.

Probably the strongest rider

in the world there.

Strongest sprinter in the world there.

Both British.

Pretty f*cking cool.

Just go and conquer the world, like.

[commentator] One kilometer to go.

[Mark] We were going to finish off

in Paris in style.

[commentator] What a team effort!

Perfect delivery from Cavendish

and this is where he'll light it up!

He practically owns the place.

Look at the gap!

Nobody's going to catch this man.

Four wins in the last four years!

Right here!

[Mark] It was an incredible day.

I'm getting led out by Bradley

in the British team.

And I'd won the Tour de France.

That was the best day of my career.

Without a doubt.

[pensive music playing]

How can I do everything?

Train harder. Not eat.

Be on my own in boot camp mode.

It'd just be so bad.

He was quite desperate,

I think, by that point.

He was quite short with me

because I didn't understand.

You don't go

from being the best in the world

to really not even capable of

How? How? How has it happened?

[Peta] We argued about nothing.

We were so

lost in the middle of everything

that was going on.

[Mark] Like, I was a nightmare

to live with, but

Peta could have eased that stuff,

do you know what I mean?

Like, she could have.

[Peta] He was

Not really him at that particular moment.

[Mark] Was I going f*cking crazy?

What the f*ck was wrong with me?

So I called my old team doctor.

In the past when something went wrong,

he was very angry

and he wanted to get it right.

But in this moment, he was hurt.

He was suffering.

And to see Mark suffering

is something very unique.

[Mark] I had gastro exams.

I had psychological assessments.

I had neurological tests. Reaction tests.

Blood tests.

[Dr. Helge] The blood results showed that

there was an active infection in his body.

We call it Epstein-Barr virus.

So, for Mark, it's a disaster.

It was still there.

[labored breathing]

He said, "You shouldn't have been racing."

"You should have

stopped there immediately."

If you continue to race with Epstein-Barr

or any other infection,

you always go deeper and deeper,

so you can't recover anymore

and even to ride a race

like the Tour de France, it's impossible.

The psychological testing results

were very low.

Yeah, I was told

I had clinical depression.

[Dr. Helge] Close to the situation

where I would say,

"This patient has to stay in a hospital."

I hadn't thought I had

Any sort of mental health disorder.

It was difficult because

Mark had not really been anybody

that had bought into

the idea of depression.

Mark was very much like,

"Well, you would just decide that

you'd be stronger than that."

Or, you know, like, sort yourself out.

[Dr. Helge] I wasn't sure if he would

get out of the depression

without quitting cycling.

To recommend to stop cycling

and leave all the pressure away

and start a different life.

[Peta] When things aren't good with Mark,

he completely shuts down.

Helge was someone that

I could definitely confide in.

Helge said, "Please just try and hold on."

"Like, try and hold on

because he is there still,

underneath, kind of, this."

"You just have to try and hold on."

"He doesn't mean

a lot of the things that he's saying."

"I know that doesn't make it

any easier for you."

"But."

We just have to hope that when

we come through the other side of this,

"the person that you do recognize

is still there."

[train chugging slowly]

Welcome to South Africa

for those who've not been here before,

and welcome to the team building

and planning camp for 2019.

We've got an Aussie here at the moment,

so David, do you want to come on up?

So this is a bit of a coup for us

because often sports psychology

and athlete welfare is kind of overlooked.

So it's a real luxury to have David

here for this week to work with you guys.

Usually the only time people call me

is when the excrement hits

the oscillation device, as they say.

We'd met at a team training camp

in Cape Town.

[inaudible]

They'd had a really terrible year in 2018.

And they were looking for some type

of performance enhancement.

So we had a strategy this year

that was "Better together."

I was thinking about "Onwards and upwards"

and some people advised me to say,

"f*ck that,

we're fighting for our future."

The head coach at the time

was very, very critical of Cav.

Cav wasn't displaying

the behaviors of a marquee rider.

You could see that he wasn't in shape.

We have a program that all cyclists use

that showed he was under performing.

Do we really keep him? Do we not keep him?

I mean, what is the way out of this?

[David] He hadn't been doing the training.

There's mistruths

when it comes to his training.

Also with his eating. Um

So all that stuff just didn't add up.

[Rolf] Team management thought, "Okay,

it's an older rider who had a great career

that we used pretty well in

the first years to attract sponsors,

but now he's old, he's not fast."

How much are we paying this person?

And what is he actually doing?

Is he on a holiday?

He's just, you know

Is he taking the piss?

At the start of the season,

he's under performing

more than what we thought he would.

[commentator] Many have been asking

about the whereabouts of Mark Cavendish.

Not in any of the two

or three front groups we've seen today.

Mark Cavendish has been dropped.

Rolf called me and said,

"Cav's done, he's finished."

"He's telling everyone that, you know."

"He's handshaking people

and saying he's finished."

"Last time you'll see him."

If you always try to live

in this world of glory and fame

and being untouchable, and, uh

On top of the game,

I think that really makes things

super difficult on the human level.

I had a lot of talks with Peta there

over the period of time.

Because that is what, ultimately,

also saves Mark all the time.

You know, falling back

to the place where the family is.

[Peta] It was completely irrational

how cross he would be about something

or how upset something would make him.

I didn't know this version of him at all.

But I was sleeping in the same bed as him.

I was cooking for him, cleaning for him,

trying to make sure he was okay.

Trying to fix him.

It would be like, "Well, if you hadn't

have let me be on my own all that time,

maybe we wouldn't be here."

And then the house was just too loud,

so he couldn't be in the house.

We'd have to not stay in the house.

I didn't have anything,

didn't want anything, didn't

Do anything, didn't feel anything.

Just

You're just f*cking empty, like, you know.

[breathing heavily]

The sense of worthlessness.

And I was scared

that I was going to go past my limit

and not be able to come back again.

I would then ring Helge and be like,

"I don't know where he's gone,

I don't know what to do."

[Rolf] And everyone realized that

something was really, really bad with him.

I'd lost any get up that I'd ever had.

Just to be a person, to be a dad.

To be a friend, a husband, like.

[Dr. Helge] I think there's a high risk

that you harm yourself,

or even that you commit su1c1de.

[Dr. Helge] Mark and I made a deal.

I said, "Before you do something

to yourself".

"Call me."

[thunder rumbling]

[pensive music playing]

Walking through

the small Isle of Man airport,

and looking around for Mark Cavendish,

and there was this lovely, lovely lady

who said, "Are you David?"

"Mmm. Yes." And it was Mark's mom.

And I actually said, "Where's Mark?"

I'd never really been

a fan of sports psychologists.

I always feel judged by a psychologist.

Should I not cross my arms

in front of you?

What do you do with your hands?

You know, they're reading me.

[David] I get to the front door,

and I hear, [imitating Mark]

"Sorry, Mom, I'm in the toilet!"

[in normal voice] And, yeah,

Cav was evacuating his stomach contents

because he'd

slightly hungover. [Chuckles]

More than slightly.

I thought it was a waste of time doing it.

It's like, "Okay, what have I actually

walked into here?"

I just thought,

"Doesn't work for me," you know?

I was making sure

that the situation wasn't acute enough

to have to call someone

to put him in the hospital.

Because you were worried

he was going to harm himself?

Yeah, yeah.

So, yeah.

Peta, she was extremely concerned

for her husband.

"Is my life worth it anymore?"

"This is not worth it."

[interviewer] Did you have any

comprehension of how worried Peta, Rolf,

everybody was about you?

No, not at all.

No.

I was too consumed in self-pity

to care about what anyone

Cared about me.

[David] Needed some time with friends.

They just knew Cav as Cav.

Didn't care where the performance was.

It was just him.

And, uh, yeah, love him for him.

[Peter Kennaugh] I've known Cav

pretty much my whole life.

He used to come round my house in Onchan

and babysit me for the day.

And he'd take me to the park.

And we'd all go off on our bikes.

[chuckles] Pete's loose as f*ck, like

And

A good guy, like, I love him.

I've loved him since he was a kid.

He's a really hard

personality and character

to understand and get your head around.

He always holds his cards

close to his chest

in terms of how he's feeling

and who he is.

So, he seemed fine,

but then I probably seemed fine,

you know, for large parts of my life

when I haven't been, so

Cav's identity is winning bike races.

It's who he is. It's what gets him

out of bed in the morning.

What does life look like without it,

do you know what I mean?

[David] His happy place

has always been on his bike, by himself.

I rode a scooter beside him

every day for ten days. Um

And I refused to speak

until he spoke to me first.

We'd talk about

some eating issues in the past

and some pressures to perform.

What is it

that's out of control in his life

that he's trying to control with eating?

[Peter] He is a perfectionist,

and he likes

a certain way of doing things.

A lot of people would be happy

with who they are as a person

and don't feel the need to prove

people wrong, do you know what I mean?

Where does that come from?

And we stopped at this little field.

He's like, "Do you know what this is?"

I'm like, "No."

He's like, "This is where

I first started racing a bike."

[children laughing]

He said, "My dad used to take me here,

and I'd race my bike."

He said, "This is where it started."

And I knew. It was like, "I've got you."

- [woman speaking indistinctly]

- [kid crying]

[Mark] My mom is really emotional.

Everything is clouded

by emotion. Everything.

My dad's very logical.

Both of them are more extreme than I am.

Then they got divorced and that.

I was about ten.

Yeah, it wasn't easy at all.

About that time that they split up,

I started cycling.

He came back to young Cav,

the eight-year-old kid

that rode his bike

because it got him away from things.

[inaudible]

Right now, we come to the really fast man.

And he's Mark Cavendish.

Mark, how do you think your form's going?

- Okay.

- Okay.

How are you going tonight?

Okay. I did better than I thought I would.

- Did you win, or were you second?

- No, I was about that far.

I could ride a bike

pretty quick, you know.

Mark is going

to the Scottish Provident Challenge '96.

[Mark] Even when I was a kid,

I had to be the best at stuff.

That is, if you're good at something,

you want to be even better.

And then, when you're better at something,

you get even better at it.

[cheers and applause]

It snowballs, doesn't it?

I was just loving being out.

There was no structure to the training,

but there was a purpose to it.

You know?

[David] He found that

his joy wasn't in racing his bike.

His joy was in being, just cycling.

And that bike is

Was a sense of freedom.

[birds squawking]

He was really angry with management,

and he goes,

"Hey, Siri, who is Doug Ryder?"

And Siri would return,

"I don't know who that is."

And he'd laugh. He'd think that's amazing.

And then after that he'd go,

"Hey, Siri, who's Mark Cavendish?"

[indistinct chatter]

[Doug] We wanted to have these sessions

so you guys can understand each other.

And learn from each other

because there's younger riders that

haven't been in the classics a long time.

It is all about the best connected team

in every which way possible.

[Rolf] Mark came back to the team,

and it was clear that

this is now a new fresh start.

You know what,

why don't we go full steam ahead,

I'll come back

to Tour de France, and, uh

And win.

[Rolf] So let's get him

back into sprinting.

Let's, you know, get him back

to focus on what he's good at.

So, Dimension Data, they had a policy

of not selecting their Tour de France team

until very late.

We went down the list

of who should and shouldn't go.

[Rolf] That was clearly dividing the team

into Mark supporters

and Mark non-supporters.

[David] That phone call went on for,

I think, three hours or so.

It's still, to this day,

one of the weirdest performance calls

I've ever been associated with.

It was between Mark Cavendish

to go to the Tour de France

and another bike rider.

[inaudible]

Our best chance is Mark Cavendish,

and people like it or don't,

but it's our best chance.

And you can argue

whatever you want to argue,

it remains our best chance.

Don't tell me he's too old

because he's not.

Don't tell me his talent is gone

because talent does not go.

Doug Ryder was quite vocal

in what he thought they should do.

[Mark] So I'm up

on this mountain, and, uh

And my phone starts going. [Chuckling]

"What do you mean I've not

been selected for the Tour de France?"

f*cking distraught, man.

I was angry.

I'd never missed a Tour de France.

I called eight names,

and Mark was included,

and then, of course, the team owner

has the right to overrule me,

which he did.

[reporter] There's been some suggestions

of tension in the team,

and there has been a resignation.

Look, this was a team decision in the end.

I'm not the only person that

makes a decision on the selection.

[Rolf] So I think that was the end point

for Mark at Dimension Data,

and for myself as well.

[Mark] Then lockdown happened.

Three or four

Really good. Thank you so much.

We were at home all together

and we had the longest period of time

we'd ever spent in one block together,

which was ten weeks,

which doesn't really sound that much.

It's the most time I've ever spent

with Peta, let alone with the kids.

I built a little indoor trainer

and put a kids' bike on it

for Casper to ride it with me.

It felt like we could

breathe again a little bit.

[Delilah] Down and up

- The man pulled the ladder up, up, up

- Up, up, up

We'd been holding our breaths

and just hoping for the best.

Don't allow him.

Maybe I could have held on

for another two years.

Maybe I'd have held on for ten years.

Maybe I'd have held on for a month.

I don't know.

Happy birthday to you

[cheering]

This is what we were waiting for.

Like, this, now.

Just to be home was, like,

so different than what I'd ever had.

And I loved it.

I really did.

[man] Mark Cavendish signs

for new team, Bahrain McLaren.

Hopes are high

for a change in his fortunes.

[Mark] McLaren were coming into cycling.

The most exciting project in cycling

for years and years and years.

First race back since lockdown.

I couldn't sprint.

Even the biggest dreamers

lost the hope that he's going to be

the Mark Cavendish from before ever again.

It's been 16 years I've done this.

I know how to sprint.

I just can't sprint. I can't do it.

Everybody was questioning,

"Why is he still doing it?"

"Why is he still racing?"

"Why is he continuing?"

[indistinct chatter]

He's not there anymore.

He's never going to win a bike race.

[commentator] Well, there's Mark Cavendish

taking off his race number,

number 21, from his bike

and placed it in his back pocket.

What significance is there in that?

[sniffles]

[interviewer]

I see you're getting emotional.

It's perhaps the last race

in my career now.

So I'm a little bit

[interviewer] Do you really think

this is your last race?

Maybe, yeah.

[Peta] Suddenly my phone

was "Ding, ding, ding, ding."

And I thought, "Oh, my God."

Just, like, a million people had sent

obviously this bloody clip

of Mark crying.

I loved always Mark,

and my heart was breaking.

So I could not see it,

and I called him.

[Mark] Patrick Lefevere,

my old boss at Quick-Step,

asked me to send my CV.

My list of 160 race wins.

If somebody's in the sh*t,

and you raise the hands to help,

it's nothing to do

with a smart businessman.

It's more sentimental.

He said to me, "Yeah,

I've got one spot left,

but I don't have any budget."

So I asked him,

"Okay, what if I found a sponsor?"

I took him with my heart,

and he came with empty hands.

And everybody declared me crazy

to take him.

You cannot explain everything in life.

Why you fall in love with one lady

and not with the other?

I was assigned to a new coach.

Vasi.

So, can I say that he had

the reputation of being an assh*le?

Or gonna cut? [Chuckles]

[interviewer] No, that's great.

- Is it allowed, yeah?

- Yeah.

[Vasilis] He was a guy who was shouting,

he didn't show respect to the other guys.

Not even to his opponents,

but also to his own teammates.

He was shouting

if something was not going right.

Yeah, I was like

Everybody was like, [sighs]

"Mark Cavendish is coming."

"That's going to be a pain in the ass."

Yeah. That was the first thought.

A pain in the ass.

f*ck, he was so direct

with what he said straight away.

[Vasilis] I would tell him directly,

"Mark, today was a sh*t day."

"You were sh*t. You're not good enough."

"So you have to try harder."

I f*cking liked this guy, you know.

[Vasilis] Top coaches were saying

that he's never going to win again.

Let's do it.

Let's prove them wrong.

Mark Cavendish

was third choice as sprinter.

I'd be the bottom of the ladder.

But also that meant

I didn't have the weight of the team

resting on my shoulders, you know.

Vasi said, "Come to Greece".

"And do a boot camp."

[Vasilis] We did some long rides

and the climbs around Athens.

It's the climbs

that used to be my training rides.

He's passionate.

He lives every pedal rev with you.

[Vasilis] Mark had Epstein-Barr.

Training was really hard,

but he was responding.

My wife cooked for him

some special Greek food.

He was playing with my kids.

That was really, really special.

[Mark] He's just hyper-emotional,

like, super-melodramatic, you know?

He's brilliant. He just wears

He doesn't even wear his heart

on his sleeve, he'd, like

He just holds it out in front of him.

[Vasilis] Everything was better.

His numbers were there,

he was sprinting faster than before,

he was, uh,

climbing faster than before.

[upbeat music playing]

He was like a 20-year guy who's hungry

for his first win of his life.

I'd push harder and harder and harder.

But, f*ck me, I was going good, you know.

[Vasilis] He was like Rocky Balboa.

Rocky Balboa training to b*at Drago.

He was lying completely dead,

down on the floor, he was vomiting.

He told me, "Vasi, I hate you."

I said, "Thanks, thanks a lot."

"That's special."

"If you hate me after a session,

that's a good sign."

"Thank you." [chuckles]

Come on, Daddy!

Come on, Daddy!

Come on, Daddy!

[Vasilis] He just wanted to get the win

so his kids could see him win again.

I see 300 to go, I'm still five back.

That was like,

[sighs] "That's not so good."

"He's going to lose some speed now."

[commentator] Mark Cavendish

locked out of it, I'm afraid.

I turn left in the final, a few back.

[Vasilis] I get nervous.

He's in the fifth, sixth wheel.

He's trying to find a way.

The wind's coming from the right,

and I can pass Philipsen,

but the line's coming.

I come at him, come at him.

I reckon if I dive left,

I'll get a bigger run

because I'll get in the slipstream.

[Vasilis] Go, go, Mark.

He sees a space, he's done it!

[commentator] Mark Cavendish has done it!

First win since 2018!

What about that? He is so pleased.

I am so pleased.

Whoo-hoo! Great race, man.

Congratulations, man.

You've done so much.

You've really done so much.

[commentator] Good things come

to those who wait.

And that was a mighty long wait.

Wow. He did it.

The winner is back.

I hadn't felt that for a while,

like, you know.

[Vasilis] He proved everybody wrong.

We did our job.

And we did brilliantly.

It was just the Tour of Turkey.

Every race is important, but, you know,

I knew it wasn't the Tour de France.

There was no chance.

There was no chance

of him going to the Tour.

They were giving him what he deserved

as the greatest sprinter of all time,

which was the chance to go out

with a team that loved him, respected him,

on his own terms.

It was never to have a sh*t

at the Tour de France.

[man] Patrick Lefevere has stated

he's not taking him to the Tour,

and frankly, I don't know what

that means for Mark Cavendish.

[somber music playing]

I was deflated then, you know.

[Vasilis] In cycling, you never know

what can happen.

There are a lot of crashes,

there are a lot unexpected situations.

So I said, "Let's focus

on the Tour de France,

we know that you're not going to do it,

but let's prepare as if

you're going to do the Tour de France."

He said, "Just go out to Italy."

"You never know what happens."

There was no chance.

There was no chance

of him going to the Tour.

I got a call from Peta,

telling me, "Vasi, are you crazy?"

"Asking him to go away from his family

again for no reason?"

"He's not going to do the Tour de France,

Sam Bennett will."

We were like, "We're gonna have

loads of time off now,

like, this is going to be fine."

Yeah, we were going to go away

and get to kind of come together

and spend time with each other.

And then I said, "Peta, let him go."

[Mark] I was out doing,

like, a super-long ride.

And when I got in, I had a missed call

from Head Sports Director.

Hello?

Sam Bennett had had a knee injury.

There was a big discussion,

how we go to the Tour de France.

It was, like, 50-50,

very much doubting Mark Cavendish.

Then I said, "I want Mark."

"Yeah, but you're crazy."

I said, "No, I want Mark."

And, of course,

at the end of the story, I'm the boss.

A bit speechless, like.

I was shocked.

[Patrick] I had a very good gut feeling.

Some things you can't explain.

You feel the ambition,

you feel he wanted to race.

Champions, they are ready

to do a lot of effort

to show the world, "I'm not done."

[Mark] I built my whole career

around this race.

Nothing changes

to just be buzzing to be here.

It was such a pure joy that I had for him.

He got to go back to that race,

back where he loved.

[Vasilis] At the start of the season,

nobody ever thought

that Mark Cavendish was going

to the Tour de France.

It was out of the question.

He was a guy who couldn't finish a race

for the last three years.

It's already, uh,

more than a dream to be here.

[chuckles] Last minute call-up.

I have some self-belief,

but even that, I wouldn't have believed.

[man] Cav, he's been on top

of the game forever.

I was teammates with him.

That shows you how long it was.

That shows you how old he is.

Cavendish is 36 now.

I don't think it's going to happen.

It would be an amazing story.

[Patrick] People like this.

The story of the

The lost son

who has the chance to get back

on the biggest theater of the world

in our sport.

If I wasn't able to win

the Tour de France stage,

I don't think I'd be in the Tour.

That's right, boss, no?

Like, I mean

Everything was good enough for me

because I paid him peanuts.

So, who I am to ask somebody results

if I pay him peanuts?

[inaudible]

And I said, "I know this is

really unfair what's happening."

"You are here in the Tour de France

with this sh*t salary,

but I give you a bonus

for every week you survive."

"And I give you a bonus

for every stage you win."

[upbeat music playing]

[Mark] I was nervous.

It's a different level

to the rest of cycling.

It's really a different level.

I hadn't been there for a few years,

so I didn't know what to expect.

[cheers and applause]

[Vasilis] I knew that he was strong enough

to survive.

I knew that he would suffer

like a dog every day.

But Mark's a big, big champ

and a big warrior.

[inaudible]

[Vasilis] He's just going

to win for his kids.

You know, Casper had never

saw him winning.

[Peta screaming]

I had all of the kids at home.

- [indistinct commentary on TV]

- [Peta screaming]

We were on the TV.

[Delilah] You got this.

[Peta] The children are just over the moon

and excited.

[cheering]

[Peta] But regardless of anything

that happened now,

whether he left after a week,

whether he won no stages,

whether he whatever, it didn't matter

because he'd got to go back to that race.

[commentator]

The Tour de France is underway

and the first att*cks are beginning.

The fight is on.

A fairytale return for Mark Cavendish.

[Delilah] Go on!

It started so fast.

[commentator] Here, everybody's

going for everything.

It was the Tour de France,

but a level up from

where I'd left a few years ago.

[people cheering]

I I remember thinking to myself, like,

"What the f*ck have I done here?"

"Oh, sh*t."

[commentator] Oh, crash behind.

And I think that is a mass crash.

Really hectic right now

because there was a crash

in the back of the peloton.

[commentator 1] Another rider down.

Huge crash behind! Oh, that's carnage!

[commentator 2] It's an absolute shocker.

This is exactly

what we didn't want to happen

on the opening day of the Tour de France.

Wow! It is absolutely crazy here.

[commentator 2] Yet another one!

Sagan is down!

[commentator] Awful crashes that have

taken their toll on the race already.

We've got several riders

very patched up here.

I just count myself lucky I didn't

come down like some of the other guys.

This race.

We always talk about how dangerous

the first week of the Tour is.

These guys go to bed every night

praying they're not gonna

hit the deck in the first week.

[man 1] They are going a lot faster.

[man 2] Faster speeds

than we've ever seen.

[commentator] It's not often you see that.

Not often you see that

little display of vulnerability.

- [people clamoring]

- [indistinct announcement on PA]

[Vasilis] He was racing against

the fastest sprinters in the world.

Most of them are really young, and,

in the normal, he cannot b*at them.

Last time I'd won at the Tour,

I'd won in Fougres.

I spoke to my teammates about it,

and said, "The most important thing

is to get into that final right-hander

near the front."

"Get me there and I'll do it."

[man] My pick is Cavendish.

Are you kidding me?

You have these man-crushes.

And they take over your life.

No, Quick-Step, no.

Absolutely not.

[man] Well, we'll see.

[indistinct announcement on PA]

[commentator 1] That's an awful lot

of not just damaged equipment,

but damaged bodies in this peloton.

[commentator 2] I've never seen

so many riders in bandages.

Another thing I've seen

is Mark Cavendish, who's stopped.

He did something

on his handlebar or his cleats.

Bit of trouble there for Mark Cavendish.

[Casper] Come on, Daddy!

[Peta] There had been a problem.

He'd had a mechanical and dropped back.

And it was like, "Oh, sh*t."

[commentator 1] So, we've got a breakaway.

[commentator 2] Don't be surprised

about this rider disappearing

up the road and causing the peloton

a huge problem.

[Peta] A breakaway is when a rider

breaks away from the main peloton

and goes off on their own

out at the front of the race.

[commentator]

This is the time trial of his life.

It's going to be tight.

The stage win is still possible.

[Peta] And you've got a group behind

of 100-plus riders

that are chasing you down.

I was looking at the times

and working it out

and thinking,

"They're leaving it very late."

"That is going to need a big pull

to be on the front."

Mom, I don't know

[indistinct commentary on TV]

[Mark] Julian was in green, and I remember

him just going on the front

and just pulling.

Just pulling with no thought

other than catching the break.

[commentator] Mark Cavendish in

the burn seat, just for the time being.

Where is he? Yes.

[commentator] What a night this is

for Brent van Moer. Can he hold on?

[people cheering]

They're hunting him down. They're coming!

[Peta] Mark's in the middle

of all of that. Daddy's blocked in.

[commentator] Look at this.

350 meters to go!

Can he be caught? It's going to be tight!

Oh, no, he's boxed in, he's boxed in.

He's in the middle of it.

Come on!

- Go!

- Come on!

[people cheering]

[commentator] There goes Mark Cavendish!

And here comes Mark Cavendish!

[Casper] Let's do it!

[commentator]

He can possibly get there.

[Peta] Oh, my God, oh, my God.

[commentator] Mark Cavendish

is going to do it. He's done it!

[Peta and kids cheering]

[Delilah] Daddy did it!

- Yes!

- [Delilah] Daddy did it!

[commentator] That is unbelievable

in so many ways!

[all cheering, yelling]

[Peta] He did it!

[indistinct announcement on PA]

[crying]

[instrumental music playing]

[Peta] Everything that we'd been through

those last few years,

that holding on, that believing,

just all came out in one go.

[Mark] All I want to do

is just see my boys, you know.

That's all I want to do.

Just nice to share this with them.

f*cking hell, Mark.

You are so f*cking fast.

[Vasilis] To me, that was

the biggest comeback. It's a dream.

Even now I'm getting emotional because

It was just something unbelievable,

what happened right then.

And I was so proud.

You know, being part of it.

It takes a lot for me

to sit there and go, "Did I"

"I don't think

I witnessed what I witnessed."

I'm shocked.

And at the same time, I'm so proud of him

and happy for him.

[man] Just to see

what he's been through.

A lot of self-doubt, a lot of depression.

Um I don't like being wrong,

but for this time,

I'm really glad I was wrong.

- [announcer speaks French]

- [cheers and applause]

[Patrick] I think

it was like a fairytale, huh?

Somebody who was lost,

given up by everybody.

It's like a dream. [Laughing]

What are you doing to me?

I was near to a heart att*ck.

And then, taking his chance.

[Mark] Thank you, man.

You thank me already with what you did.

And then winning.

Thank you for believing,

for making me happy.

The whole year, I'm just happy again.

People don't believe in miracles,

me neither.

But we did it,

and all the rest, f*ck them.

- [man laughing]

- [cheers and applause]

[singing in French]

For he's a jolly good fellow.

[Lance] Cav is back.

Today, he won his 31st stage,

only three behind

the greatest of all time, Eddy Merckx.

Really, really happy for him

because, well, I told you.

[commentator] Cavendish perfectly placed.

Daddy's led out.

Do it!

You can do it.

I miss him.

Mark Cavendish shakes

two fists at the sky.

[Lance] Dude

Speechless.

[reporter] Mark, it's your 32nd victory.

You know what my question is going to be.

[breathing heavily]

- Don't say the name.

- I didn't say it.

I'm not thinking about anything.

He knew he could b*at all of them.

Yeah, once he starts winning,

he just can't stop.

[commentator] Cavendish in a near-perfect

position here for win number 33.

When's he going to light it up?

The line belongs to him!

Thirty-three. Eddy, are you watching?

[reporter] I didn't ask you the question.

[laughs] Thank you.

Daddy, Daddy!

[commentator] Are we going

to see Eddy Merckx's record

matched by Mark Cavendish?

Cavendish, the Manx m*ssile,

is he going to match Merckx?

[laughing] He's done it!

Thirty-four stage wins!

We made history!

[in Italian] We made history!

[both laughing]

[Lance] Unbelievable.

Now he has tied the record.

I never thought this would happen.

But I'm psyched for him.

And I'm done.

I'm done bashing

on Mark Cavendish. I promise.

Yeah. Just

I was in tears. The joy.

Just the

Oh, the emotion and joy

that he got out of that.

That's huge. Huge, yeah.

Something that we'd spoken about

in the darkest of his times.

[indistinct announcement on PA]

[breathing heavily]

I know how far he has come.

Yeah.

[Peta] Having to be broken

and rebuild yourself,

I think it definitely made him

remember why he sacrifices

what he sacrifices.

[reporter] Mark, can I ask you

the question?

What's it like to be

the equal of Eddy Merckx?

It really brought a human side

to what I do for the first point

in my career, really.

It made me realize

I didn't win it alone.

I wish I knew that.

I could go back and do my career again

knowing that, you know.

This is how it was always supposed to be.

[in unison] We're so proud of you, Daddy.

[cheers and applause]

[Lance] How sick would it be,

he's at 34,

coming into Paris,

and he's still in the race,

and that's the day to break the record?

[man] You can't script that.

- You cannot script that.

- Yeah.

You all right?

- Hi.

- Can I give Daddy these?

- Look who it is!

- [Mark] Hello!

[Casper] Hello, Dad!

Hi, Dad!

Daddy, you got me a present.

Hello.

[Peta] Daddy, have you got me

my new green jersey?

[Casper] Daddy, what's that noise?

[Peta] Daddy's going to do his race.

We'll see him at the finish.

- Love you!

- Good luck, Daddy!

[upbeat music playing]

[yells]

We're here now, just coming through

on to the 1 km flag.

This is the Champs-lyses.

The most beautiful finish

to any bike race in the world.

I was very fortunate

to do that with that man,

Mark Cavendish,

who's going for number five today.

It's magic. Magic.

This is going to be my last transmission.

I love it. I love this sport.

I'll hand you back to the commentary team.

And come on, Mark!

[commentator] Three weeks of racing

in France, and it all comes down to this.

700 meters to go!

Onto the cobbles on the Champs-lyses.

Cavendish battling for space.

It's getting tight!

Cavendish, he's boxed in.

Bernal takes it.

Frustration for Cavendish.

Not to be in the end for Mark Cavendish,

but, boy, can he be proud

of the last three weeks in France.

Equaling the Merckx's record

and taking the green jersey,

fully a decade after he last claimed it.

No one has ever done that before.

[Mark] There's no number that's enough.

[speaking indistinctly]

[Mark] But I've got

the most incredible family

You all right, mate?

With that alone, my life is perfect.

Daddy, did you win?

Daddy!

- Daddy!

- [Peta] One minute.

What you doing?

- [Peta speaks indistinctly]

- Daddy! Daddy! Daddy!

- Daddy?

- Casper, just give him a minute.

[Mark] I'll continue trying to win

for as long as I believe I can win.

[in German] Good morning

from Austria with Bernie Eisel.

[indistinct]
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