Breakaway successes can sometimes be tricky to predict at Grand Tours: terrain, team tactics, GC dynamics, and rider form constantly shift. What succeeds one day fails the next. Uncertainty is the only constant. But, the writing was on the wall for Jay Vine’s triumphant ride on stage six of the Vuelta a España. The UAE Team Emirates-XRG rider deliberately lost time on the opening stages — a classic hallmark of a rider looking to be given leeway in a breakaway by the teams of the overall contenders.
The Australian also lives in Andorra, so the stage represented an opportunity to win on home roads in front of his wife and one-year-old son. It was one of the heartwarming stories coming out of stage six of the Vuelta, the other being that the second-place finisher on the day, Torstein Træen (Bahrain-Victorious), who was diagnosed with testicular cancer in 2022, is now the new red jersey leader.
Vine always has a knack of picking out a winning move, which comes down to planning and execution. He didn’t have all summer to ruminate on the stage though, as the Vuelta wasn’t part of his season plans originally.
“It’s pretty incredible. I got the call up to do this race about four weeks ago, it wasn’t on my schedule originally. So, to be able to win in Andorra, in front of my son with my wife, it’s unbelievable. I was incredibly motivating — the last 5km, all I could think about was ‘this is for you Harrison, this is for you’,” Vine said at the finish, the poignant moment and the emotion of what he had achieved coming through in his voice.
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The climber is a luxury domestique for the UAE squad, who have now claimed back-to-back stage wins after their stellar TTT on stage five. He is often seen pulling monstrous turns to help his leaders, or going in breakaways to act as a satellite rider. UAE’s tactics had two potential outcomes: fighting for the stage win or supporting his leaders later in the stage.
“[The plan] was definitely to win the stage, but there was always the option that if the break wasn’t going to win that I could come back and do some work. So, it was always on the cards to have me in the breakaway as an option if everything came back together,” said Vine.
It’s clear Vine is a master strategist, who likes to not only out-power his competitors but also out-wit them. Explaining his tactics he said, “I know these roads pretty well. I am from just down the hill. La Comella is my favourite climb in the whole of Andorra and I would have normally liked to have done it way harder, but with the head wind, it was hard to get the guys to really pull through and so I decided to go at the top and on the wet descent — I know the descent really well — and I thought ‘ok, this my chance to get away’ and there’s no funny business, it’s just mano a mano.”

That’s clear enough. Get in front of your opponents and don’t let them come back. The stage also cleared up the lingering question of who was UAE’s overall leader at this Vuelta. Like in May’s Giro d’Italia, where Ayuso’s GC bid blew up on stage 16, the Andorran climbs delivered a harsh dose of reality. On the relentless succession of ascents culminating at Pal, Juan Ayuso simply imploded. The legs betrayed him when it mattered most, and the once‑promising bid for overall glory dissolved in agony.
In that instant, what was looking like a two‑pronged UAE threat unraveled. Gone is the uneasy co‑leadership dynamic — Ayuso’s collapse has simplified the narrative. With his compatriot now effectively sidelined in the GC battle, the UAE can pivot, rallying around João Almeida as the undisputed leader. With the Portuguese rider looking strong on the final climb, clawing back Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) and Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek), the outcome has clarified the rest of the Vuelta’s tactics for UAE.
UAE need no longer split resources or risk internal rivalry: the road ahead is clear, collective, and unequivocally Almeida’s. The mountains, as they always do, have decided.
Read more: Cancer survivor Torstein Træen leads Vuelta a España