TEAM UAE’s Australian rider Jay Vine celebrates winning the sixth stage of La Vuelta a Espana, a 170km distance from Olot to Pal, on Thursday.—AFP
TEAM UAE’s Australian rider Jay Vine celebrates winning the sixth stage of La Vuelta a Espana, a 170km distance from Olot to Pal, on Thursday.—AFP

PAL: Australian Jay Vine of UAE Team Emirates-XRG launched a solo attack from a breakaway group in the final 20 kilometres to win stage six of the Vuelta a Espana on Thursday, with Torstein Traeen of Norway taking second place and the overall race lead.

Vine was part of a 10-man group which got away early on the 170.3km ride from Olot to Pal in Andorra, before the Australian went for broke and held off the chasers to secure the third individual Vuelta stage win of his career.

The first real mountain stage of this year’s race brought the first big shake-up in the overall standings, with four of the group which escaped the peloton overtaking race favourite Jonas Vingegaard in the overall standings.

Traeen of Team Bahrain Victorious came in 54 seconds behind Vine, enough to move from 26th overall to the top of the general classification, with a 31-second lead over Frenchman Bruno Armirail, who finished fourth on the stage.

Italy’s Lorenzo Fortunato of XDS Astana was third over the line and is also third overall, while Vine’s team-mate Vingegaard dropped from first to fifth, two minutes and 33 seconds adrift of the new leader Traeen.

The riders were climbing from the start and the breakaway made their successful move on the first ascent, with Vine first over the summit of Collada de Sentigosa, as last year’s mountains classification winner showed early signs of his climbing prowess.

Vine and his companions steadily increased their lead, overcoming the category one climb of Collada de Toses in wet conditions.

With 40 kilometres left to race, the relaxed peloton trailed by over six minutes, and while they later began to eat into the gap, it was too late to haul in the riders out in front.

Vine was again first to reach the top when they topped La Comella, and the Australian pushed ahead on the descent, pulling further away on the final climb to the finish and never looked like getting caught.

With riders like Armirail, Fortunato and Louis Verv­aeke threatening Traeen’s red jersey bid, the Norwegian launched his own attack which paid off for the 30-year-old who three years ago was diagnosed with testicular cancer.

Published in Dawn, August 29th, 2025

Opinion

Editorial

Hamas’s move
Updated 08 Jul, 2026

Hamas’s move

THE decision taken by Hamas to relinquish governance of Gaza appears to be designed to put the onus on the US and...
Terrorism threat
Updated 08 Jul, 2026

Terrorism threat

THE surge in terrorist violence in Balochistan highlights the renewed threat confronting Pakistan. The martyrdom of...
Football meddling
08 Jul, 2026

Football meddling

AFTER ending co-hosts America’s World Cup run in the last-16 stage, Belgium felt justice had been served. It was...
America at 250
07 Jul, 2026

America at 250

THOUGH America’s 250th independence anniversary observed on Saturday is a significant milestone, the celebrations...
Ravi encroachments
07 Jul, 2026

Ravi encroachments

SUPARCO’S satellite imagery reveals the rapid expansion of Lahore into the floodplains of the Ravi river, with the...
Misdirected justice
07 Jul, 2026

Misdirected justice

ACHILD will be tried in a court of law over January’s deadly Gul Plaza fire that claimed 72 lives, but not, it...