serfla said:
That's the point. To enjoy the job you do. Everything what comes along with it (the enjoyment) - it's bonus.
Little bit different in sport where (some kind of) the result is purpose, but the source of motivation should be the same in every walk of life, inner satisfaction rather than outside gratification.
Signs of maturity in the youngest Schleck.
I am surprised that people see this as "signs of maturity" for Andy. In the early part of his career, it was all about the fun. If you look at Giro 2007 and Tours 2008, 2009, same with FW and LBL that year, he didn't have a single worry in the world. He just went out and had fun and actually got great results along the way. But back then he was still a newcomer and he was not really a "favourite", so noone expected him to deliver.
But since 2010 it kind of seemed like the fun was gone. I think there were a lot of factors that contributed to it (chaingate, responsibility of leadership, problems with Riis, pressure of having created a national team, injury, Bruyneel...), I assume it was a combination of all of those. He still got really great results but it always seemed kind of forced, never as lighthearted as in the early years.
But Andy is no Wiggins, he is not like an accountant who sits in the office 8 hrs a day to win races and later proclaim that it was "no fun at all" (sic). So I really hope that he can enjoy riding again because if he does then we will see an Andy with the lightheartedness of 2007 but with the physical capability of a 28 year-old. It will (would?) be fierce. Personally I think they are off to a good start. Guercilena seems to have turned things around and they let him work with his friends again such as Didier and Andersen. As for his physical condition I think a lot of people underestimate just how little he has raced, even ridden a bike in the last year. In the interview on the front page he said he was worse than as a junior in Beijing, and now people on this forum are seriously asking "Why isn't he doing better, his last race was 3 months ago??!". But hey. What can you do.
Anyways if it had been me, I would have chosen a different program than usual. They partly did that, with Down Under and Tour Med for example, which are races he has never done IINM. Personally I would have gone a step further and said: "Screw the Tour and the Ardennes, I'll try new races this year and go for GC at Tour of Austria before heading to the Vuelta" (for example). But considering that means profoundly misunderstanding Andy. He does whatever the hell he wants, whatever is most fun to him. And that is the Ardennes and the Tour. And trying to have fun is a sign of maturity. I mean disgrace for cycling. Or something like that.