This article originally appeared on BikeRadar
For the former winner of the Giro d'Italia, it's a choice between what's perhaps the fastest aero machine money can buy, or one of lightest production bikes going. However, when you're a Grand Tour winner, you can swap to the best option for the day. That's exactly what Ryder Hesjedal does with his new Trek Madone and Emonda team bikes.
2016 sees Canada's only GT winner return to the Wisconsin behemoth, Trek bikes, a brand he was associated with back in his mountain biking days (through Gary Fisher bicycles), and in his early days as a professional on the road.
During the Tour Down Under, BikeRadar got to briefly sit down with the relaxed and approachable Canadian, to try to gain a better understanding of his bike-swapping ways. These, according to Hesjedal, are a simple matter of best matching the bike to the course on the day. If there are climbs to be had, he'll – like most riders – want to be on the very lightest (6.8kg) bike possible. Where the road is flatter and faster, the weight is less an issue and he'll pick the aero bike.
It's something he used to do when he rode Cervélos with the Garmin team, with access to the 'R' and 'S' series bikes. For 2015, such a luxury was lost with his former Cannondale team having access to just one road bike – the SuperSix Evo HM.
Madone has all the tricks
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