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My weight battle en route to a breakthrough Tour de France, by Jonas A – Rouleur

My weight battle en route to a breakthrough Tour de France, by Jonas A
– Rouleur

Until this summer, most cycling fans outside of Norway had never heard of me. But then I went on to have an incredible Tour de France with 10 days in the polka-dot jersey, three days in green, second on stage two, and five days in the break. It was something that I didn’t believe was possible before the start, but it’s now given me the confidence that I can win a stage of the Tour and also a Monument like Flanders or Roubaix.

Getting to this point, however, hasn’t been easy. From when I was a teenager, I was always very skinny – too skinny, to be honest – and I didn’t achieve my full potential. All of my role models were super light and I thought I had to be around 58-59kg if I was to have an FTP of 360 watts and push six watts per kilo up a hill. That was the weight I aimed for, but I didn’t eat enough and because of that I couldn’t build my FTP and power, my body wasn’t working as well and I suffered from delayed puberty.

I was riding for Continental teams from the age of 19, and joined Uno-X’s development team when I was 21, but my career development had stalled. I realised I had to do something to be a better rider, and in 2019 at the age of 23, I came to the understanding with the team’s nutritionist James Moran that my body was built for having muscles. So I started the process of adding 20kg of weight. It was hard, but immediately my body thanked me for it as 80kg is, I think, my natural weight: I grew seven centimetres; it was the time I started dating girls and my testosterone levels increased; I felt much stronger and less tired; and I was no longer stressed about how much I was eating, and found that I had more energy to spend with people.

It’s very important to know your body and its capacities. Some people are meant to be very skinny, but others, like me, are not. I’d tell all teenagers it’s better to eat more and work on your power, and worry about losing weight when you’re at a professional level and there’s experts to help you. At that age, you can’t only think about cycling. I look in the mirror now after my issues and I am very happy with what I see, and my body is much happier too. My weight is very stable, I recover better – when I was skinny I was inconsistent – and my performances are definitely better.

I’d had a few good results before this year – I was third on stage 18 of the Tour in 2023 – but this has been my best season yet. I was second at Dwars door Vlaanderen, in the…

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