For the latest installment of the Up-and-comer Q&A Series, VeloHuman talked to Wanty-Groupe Gobert’s Roy Jans. Now in his third year with the Belgian Pro Continental squad, Roy Jans is quickly coming into his own as a fast-finisher and potential contender for the one-day races. Despite being sidelined by mononucleosis early on in 2014 after a strong start to the year, Jans returned to racing midway through last season in the form of his life, picking up a victory in the Gooikse Pijl and nabbing Top 5s in the Belgian National Championship Road Race, Brussels Cycling Classic, and Paris-Tours, among other big races. His 2015 campaign opened with further success at the beginning of February when he took a stage victory in the Étoile de Bessèges. Now he sets his sights on the one-day Classics that are just around the corner, where he hopes to define himself a bit more clearly as a rider. Though still only 24 years old, Jans will have plenty of opportunities to make statements on the Belgian cobblestones and beyond, as Wanty-Groupe Gobert is already making him an integral part of the team plans for the season. Jans talked to VH about his development so far, his program for 2015, and his hopes for the future as a rider.
VH: You won a stage at the Étoile de Bessèges at the beginning of the month, so things seem to be going pretty well already here in 2015. How was your offseason?
RJ: The offseason was really good, with a good break and then starting my training, trying to get to good shape before the season, and everything worked well.
VH: You had a bout with mononucleosis last season. Are you feeling back to full health?
RJ: Yeah, I think so. When I started back racing last season, it was not 100% gone away, but enough to start racing again. Now, it’s completely out.
VH: How do you deal with something that difficult as you are trying to develop as a young pro?
RJ: I realized that it doesn’t need to play in my head. . . . You focus on coming back stronger, and that’s what I did.
VH: Did the results that you were able to land late last season help you return with confidence?
RJ: Yeah. After the disease, I came back stronger than before. With a 2nd place in nationals, that was good for that, and then the other good results, like in France where I beat Cavendish in the sprint [Jans notched a 2nd-place finish, ahead of Mark Cavendish in 3rd, in Stage 3 of the Tour du Poitou-Charentes], and then Paris-Tours, and all those other races, they were really good for the confidence and also for the team.
VH: Given what you were seeing in training during the offseason and the way you rode in Bessèges, do you have confidence in your chances to find further success in the early-season racing to come?
RJ: In the winter I felt really good, and all the training went well. I wasn’t sick during the winter months. So I really had a good winter and now, to win directly in Étoile de Bessèges, it was a good start for me for the confidence, and also for the team it’s really good to begin the season like that.
VH: You have a strong finishing kick and you’ve also shown the sort of versatility necessary to get good results in the tougher one-day races. Is there a particular specialization as a rider that you are working towards?
RJ: For now it’s really to be very good in the final, in the sprints, and also when there is a little climb at the end of the race . . . that’s what I saw in Bessèges already, the stage that Gallopin won [Stage 4] . . . it was really a hard final and I managed 5th place and that was already an improvement in comparison with last season. So I think I think I’ve made a step up and I hope that the other results will follow during the season in some harder races.
VH: As a younger competitor, who did you look up to in the pro peloton as a rider that you enjoyed watching, or a rider you wanted to emulate?
RJ: Óscar Freire.
VH: You’re now in your third year riding at the Pro Continental level. What’s the biggest thing you’ve learned so far as a pro?
RJ: That you really need to do everything for it. And you need to listen to your body, when you are training, when you are home, you need to listen to your body. And if you can start a race with a fresh head and fresh legs, that’s the most important thing.
VH: You signed on for two more years with Wanty-Groupe Gobert at the end of last season. What is it about the team that appeals to you and makes you want to stay?
RJ: I could go to bigger teams but I choose to stay because they give me the opportunity to ride my own races. I can choose my whole program, and also the races that I start, they will ride for me. And that’s important for me, for getting stronger and seeing how far I can come in some races.
VH: You’ve been one of the most successful riders on the team in the past year. Has Wanty-Groupe Gobert told you that they have any particular expectations for you or the role that you’ll play in the near future?
RJ: Not yet. Just for me to win stages. That’s what I want and also what the team wants.
VH: Do you know what your program looks like for the next few months?
RJ: I know my program until the beginning of April. My first Belgian race [after taking on the Volta ao Algarve, which starts Wednesday] will be Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne, so that’s already a good race for me I think. I really want to make a good result in that race. And then you have Le Samyn, also a nice race. And then Gent-Wevelgem, also important, and then I don’t ride Flanders this year, because I should be fresh for Scheldeprijs. And then it’s possible that I will ride Roubaix, and then I’ll have a little break and start again in the Tour of Turkey.
VH: Do you have any personal objectives set for 2015?
RJ: Last season I didn’t get to do the spring Classics because of the disease. So now is actually the first time that I will do it in good shape. So just seeing how far I can come, and also for the next few years, if there are races that really suit me and if I can get a good result in some of those races, that’s good for the future. Because I’m still very young, and I’m not yet saying, “that race I want to win,” or, “that race I want to do a good result.” It’s every race I start, I want to give the best of me and then we’ll see what will come.
VH: That said, you’ve ridden in most of the big Classics so far already—which one have you enjoyed the most?
RJ: For me, and for a rider like me, Gent-Wevelgem is a really nice race. It’s also one of the goals of this year and we’ll do our best to come as far as possible.
Often coming down to a sprinters’ showdown, Gent-Wevelgem looks like a prime opportunity for Jans to put his finishing kick on display and notch a benchmark result for the future. Enjoying the support of Wanty-Groupe Gobert, who have invested in his development for a few years now, Jans is motivated to prove his ability this season even as he still learns more about his own strengths as a rider, making it all the more likely that he could feature sooner rather than later in the biggest races on the cycling calendar.
-Dane Cash











