“Definitely not the way I imagined my first professional win” – Andrew August stuns peloton with landmark INEOS breakthrough

Cycling
Friday, 06 February 2026 at 17:10
Andrew August speaks to the media after his first pro win on stage 3 of the 2026 Volta a Comunitat Valenciana
For Andrew August, Stage 3 of the Volta a Comunitat Valenciana was never supposed to end with him raising his arms. It was meant to be a day of work. A day of pulling. A day of covering moves for others.
Instead, it became the moment his professional career properly began.
The 20-year-old produced a composed, instinctive ride in the final kilometres to take his first professional victory, emerging from a chaotic downhill finale after committing to a late move that looked fragile until the final metres.
It was a result that carried weight not just for August, but for INEOS Grenadiers, whose young American prospect delivered a statement win against a field packed with experience and star power.

A win that was never in the plan

Speaking after the finish, August admitted the outcome had taken him as much by surprise as anyone watching. “I honestly didn’t expect it at all during the day,” he said in conversation with Cycling Pro Net post-stage. “With about 50 kilometres to go, the team told me it was time to go to the front and help bring the break back.”
That role continued deep into the stage. August stayed sheltered over the Puerto de Tibi and reacted when the race finally split apart on the descent, following Florian Vermeersch into what became the decisive move.
Crucially, he recognised the tactical situation instantly. “From there, I didn’t really have a reason to ride because we had guys behind for the sprint. I used that to my advantage, stayed fresh, and in the end, I was able to make it work and take the win today.”
While others in the front group took turns forcing the pace, August conserved just enough energy to give himself a chance when it mattered most.

Patience rewarded in the finale

The final kilometres were frantic. The peloton closed rapidly as NSN Cycling drove the chase behind, and the margin hovered in the low double digits almost all the way to the line. August waited. He resisted the temptation to jump early. “No, definitely not the way I imagined my first professional win,” he admitted. “But I knew I’d saved a lot of energy in the final. The other guys were working full gas, and it wasn’t my role to contribute there.”
When the moment came, he did not hesitate. “I took advantage of being fresh, sprinted from the back, and crossed the line first. It’s amazing.”
The simplicity of that description belies the difficulty of the execution. On tired legs, under pressure, with the peloton almost upon them, August judged it perfectly.

A breakthrough with wider meaning

For INEOS Grenadiers, the victory represents more than a stage win in early February. It is confirmation that one of their youngest riders is already capable of reading complex race situations and delivering under pressure.
For August himself, it is a landmark moment that changes how he will be viewed inside the peloton. No longer just a rider following orders, he has now shown the instinct and nerve required to seize an opportunity when it appears.
It may not have unfolded the way he imagined. But first professional wins rarely do.
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