Description
February 18, 2026
72nd Vuelta a Andalucia Ruta Ciclista Del Sol 2026 🇪🇸 (2.Pro) ME – Stage 1 – Benahavís – Pizarra : 150,1 km
The Vuelta a Andalucía,
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February 18, 2026
72nd Vuelta a Andalucia Ruta Ciclista Del Sol 2026 🇪🇸 (2.Pro) ME – Stage 1 – Benahavís – Pizarra : 150,1 km
The Vuelta a Andalucía, popularly known as the Ruta del Sol, is one of Spain’s most prestigious stage races and a key event on the February cycling calendar. This competition is notable for passing through the mountainous landscapes of the Andalusian region, offering a route that traditionally favors climbers and classics specialists due to its constant elevation changes and steep finishes. Throughout its history, the race has served as an ideal benchmark for measuring the form of major peloton leaders before the season’s Grand Tours.
It all came down to a bunch sprint after a chaotic day full of attacks at the Vuelta a Andalucía 2026, and it was Chirstophe Laporte (Visma-Lease a Bike) who took victory in a hectic sprint in Pizarra.
The sprint was held for a long time as no-one wanted to kick but the Frenchman managed to take the win.
The day was full of attacking racing, with several riders trying to form breakaways, including some of the big overall favourites. However, after the climbing had finished and the road flattened out, it was the sprinters’ teams that finally managed to take control of the bunch.
It was a very messy finale with nobody wanting to launch and no real lead-out trains there for the fast men. Favourites like Søren Wærenskjold (Uno-X Mobility) got really boxed in but he still managed a very strong sprint to challenge for the podium.
In the end, in a tight finish, it was Bastien Tronchon (Groupama-FDJ United) who took the second step on that podium ahead of Ben Oliver (Modern Adventure).
Laporte will wear the yellow jersey tomorrow on stage two.
Stage 2 is a similar day, with a lumpy 138.6km route between Torrox and Otura. There are two categorised climbs and an uphill finish which could throw the cat amongst the pigeons and maybe see a different finale to today.
How it unfolded
The Ruta del Sol started in Benahavís with a very lumpy 163.9km stage to Pizarra. After just under 4km of neutral zone the riders headed straight up the category one Puerto del Madroño, which was almost 20km in length.
Attacks came on the climb with the first man off the front being Visma-Lease a Bike’s Victor Campenaerts. He was left out front solo for some time before Ander Okamika (Burgos-BH-Burpellet) launched to try and join the Belgian. Okamika was dragged back with a new move going clear featuring Alan Jousseaume (TotalEnergies), Josh Burnett (Burgos-NH-Burpellet), Jon Agirre (Euskaltel-Euskadi) and Jonathan Caicedo (Petrolike). However, they didn’t get far either and were brought back again.
Campenaerts was keeping solid on his own with over a minute’s advantage on the peloton. He rolled over the top of Puerto del Madroño to take the 10 mountains classification points, with Jesús Herrada (Burgos-BH-Burpellet) leading the peloton over the top ahead of Juan Pedro López (Movistar), Quinten Hermans (Pinarello-Q36.5), Torstein Træen (Uno-X Mobility) and Alessandro Fancellu MBH Bank CSB Telecom Fort), who completed the points. They were trying to force a new breakaway but just managed to bring Campenaerts back into the bunch again. Iker Mintegi (Euskaltel-Euskadi) was the first rider to abandon the race.
How it unfolded
The Ruta del Sol started in Benahavís with a very lumpy 163.9km stage to Pizarra. After just under 4km of neutral zone the riders headed straight up the category one Puerto del Madroño, which was almost 20km in length.
Attacks came on the climb with the first man off the front being Visma-Lease a Bike’s Victor Campenaerts. He was left out front solo for some time before Ander Okamika (Burgos-BH-Burpellet) launched to try and join the Belgian. Okamika was dragged back with a new move going clear featuring Alan Jousseaume (TotalEnergies), Josh Burnett (Burgos-NH-Burpellet), Jon Agirre (Euskaltel-Euskadi) and Jonathan Caicedo (Petrolike). However, they didn’t get far either and were brought back again.
Campenaerts was keeping solid on his own with over a minute’s advantage on the peloton. He rolled over the top of Puerto del Madroño to take the 10 mountains classification points, with Jesús Herrada (Burgos-BH-Burpellet) leading the peloton over the top ahead of Juan Pedro López (Movistar), Quinten Hermans (Pinarello-Q36.5), Torstein Træen (Uno-X Mobility) and Alessandro Fancellu MBH Bank CSB Telecom Fort), who completed the points. They were trying to force a new breakaway but just managed to bring Campenaerts back into the bunch again. Iker Mintegi (Euskaltel-Euskadi) was the first rider to abandon the race.
Others in the new move were Jan Christen (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), Ivan Romeo (Movistar), Adrien Boichis (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Luke Tuckwell (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Ivan Cobo (Kern Pharma), Jose Maria Martin (Kern Pharma), Clement Braz Afonso (Groupama-FDJ United), Clement Russo (Groupama-FDJ Suez), Ion Izagirre (Cofidis), Axel Zingle (Visma-Lease a Bike), Matisse Van Kerckhove (Visma-Lease a Bike), Victor Campenaerts (Visma-Lease a Bike) and Loe van Belle (Visma-Lease a Bike).
However, due to the size of the group, several attacks came to try and form a smaller move. Zingle led a new move with Cepeda, Boichis, Christen, Romeo, Azanza, Vandenstorme, Burnett, Alustiza, Hermans, Tuckwell and Cobo. They quickly got over 25 seconds on the rest of the break.
The chasing group were then absorbed by the peloton with about 45km to go. The chasing pack also closed a lot of time on the leaders with Uno-X Mobility, Pinarello-Q36.5 and Groupama-FDJ United pushing the pace. Cepeda then hit the deck in the breakaway after a bidon bounced back into the road after a rider chucked it to team staff in a feed zone. The Ecuadorian was able to continue.
Back in the peloton the Pinarello-Q36.5 riders were ripping up the peloton for Pidcock as Christen tried moves in the breakaway as well. The final 40km was being set up to be a dramatic finale as various teams looked to set up a sprint with others looking for a reduced bunch or even a solo win.
Finally, the breakaway was caught just leaving the village of Monda with 36km to go. However, Christen tried another move and this created havoc in the bunch with splits forming all over the road. It did come back together fully, though. But the lull of pace meant another attack went with eight riders involved led by Sivakov. But, this was also brought back.
Nobody was able to get control of the race with a plethora of attacks going off the front of the peloton. The peloton wasn’t for giving up, though, and the race continued to be aggressive with several teams looking to get a chance to take a win.
After being one of the most aggressive teams in the race for the majority of the day, Visma-Lease a Bike turned their attention to setting up the sprint for the likes of Laporte and Zingle. TotalEnergies also joined in the pacing. The race’s complexion completely changed in the final 30km after all the attacking, and the peloton had a real hold on the pacing.
A crash took down around eight riders at the back of the peloton with riders from Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe, Petrolike, TotalEnergies and Flanders-Baloise. All seemed to get back on the bikes and ride again, though. The peloton did briefly split due to the crash, but it all came back together again.
It took the peloton a very long time to really get up to full lead-out speed, with the bunch rather sedate by professional bike racing standards with 6km to go. Finally the tempo was upped dramatically with 4km to go. The road was rather narrow, though, with five teams blocking out the front of the bunch.
Various teams tried to take control but it was a late arriving Visma-Lease a Bike that placed their man, Laporte, best into the final 800 metres. A late bend did throw off the perfect lead-out with Ben Oliver (Modern Adventure) having to take action and jump onto the pavement to avoid crashing. Laporte was then propped on the front before Brent Van Moer (Pinarello-Q36.5) was the first to launch with about 400 metres to go.
Van Moer served as a lead-out man for the rest of the bunch but nobody wanted to go. Eventually Tronchon and Laporte launched, with the latter having the power to take the win. It was Tronchon holding on for second and Oliver taking a very impressive third.
The GC is the same as the stage due to no bonus seconds coming until later in the race.
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