Business Day

Cavendish opens up on his fight with depression

• After battling his condition for two years, cycling ace is ready to get in the saddle once again

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British cycling superstar Mark Cavendish says he has successful­ly come through a two-year battle with clinical depression, revealing on Monday that he was “dark” but is now on the “other side”.

The 34-year-old is just four stage wins shy of equalling Belgian legend Eddie Mercx’s record of 34 stage victories in the Tour de France.

However, with the coronaviru­s pandemic playing havoc with the sporting calendar — both Euro 2020 and the Olympics have been postponed for a year — there is no guarantee the Isle of Man-born rider will get a chance to have a go at the record in 2020.

The Tour is due to start on June 27.

Cavendish, though, is just happy that should the Tour go ahead he will be in a healthy state of mind for the challenge facing him.

“It’s not just been my physical health which has been dealt a blow over the last couple of years,” he told The Times. “I’ve battled quite hard with depression during this time. I was diagnosed with clinical depression in August 2018.”

Cavendish said he refused to take antidepres­sants but did seek expert counsellin­g.

“I didn’t take any medication,” he said. “Like, this isn’t the time or place — we’ll do a thing on it at some point — but I received help. I was dark. And I’m on the other side, thank you. Well, as much as I can be. I think I’ve come out of that. And it’s nice to have come out of that.”

Not many positives can be taken from the coronaviru­s pandemic but Cavendish has found one. He is back at home in the Isle of Man having agreed — like his Bahrain McLaren teammates — to take a wage deferral for three months, the size of which depends on income and individual circumstan­ces.

“It could have been easy for me to go through my whole career and only see the kids once they’re teenagers,” said the father of three.

“So to be able to absorb this ... to be able to do what mums and dads do, it keeps me happy, it keeps me super motivated and it keeps me sane I guess.”

His old mentor, Rod Ellingwort­h, believes Cavendish was not far off the form of his peak year in 2016 when he won four stages on the Tour de France. Ellingwort­h should know, because he has been reunited with Cavendish at the Bahrain McLaren team.

“His form is not like 2016 but he’s getting there,” said Ellingwort­h, who is the team GM. “If that was 10 out of 10, he’s somewhere like seven at the minute. He came to us one or two out of 10, that’s physical, mental and the passion for it. So he’s progressin­g really well.”

 ?? /Alex Davidson/Getty Images ?? On the other side: Mark Cavendish has spent the past two years battling depression and is no longer ‘dark’.
/Alex Davidson/Getty Images On the other side: Mark Cavendish has spent the past two years battling depression and is no longer ‘dark’.

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