Zabel summarised the criticism in the podcast: “Up until
now, on the stages where he could have helped Almeida, he simply conserved his
energy to then go for stage wins. If it doesn't work for Ayuso, then it won't
work for anyone else.”
The conflict escalated further on the rest day when UAE
issued a press release announcing that Ayuso and the team would part ways. The
Spaniard reacted furiously. He explained that there had been an agreement not
to publish anything until after the race, so as not to “compromise the sporting
aspect and my teammates.” Instead, he said, the statement was meant only to
“damage my image.” Ayuso even went as far as to describe the situation as being
“like a dictatorship.”
Jan Ullrich, familiar with the inner workings of the sport,
placed Ayuso’s behavior in a wider context. “It's been known internally for
some time that Ayuso isn't much of a team player,” said the 51-year-old. “A
huge talent who needs to be nurtured. But even at last year's Tour de France,
it was clear that he always does his own thing a bit.”
He was especially critical of Ayuso’s withdrawal from the
2025 Giro d’Italia after crashes and even a bee sting. “Many professional
cyclists have battled through such problems. He could have made a big
difference as a helper in the final stages.”
For Ullrich, the lesson was simple: Ayuso was a winning
rider with immense ability, but he had yet to understand that helping the team
was also part of greatness. “All great champions do that. Even Tadej Pogacar,”
he emphasised. “If Ayuso works hard and Almeida wins the Vuelta as a result,
it's also his victory. He still has to learn that.”
Zabel, by contrast, showed more patience, pointing to the
rider’s youth. “He's only 22, you have to admit that. You're just predisposed
to that. I can say the same thing about myself: At that age, I also thought, I
want to sprint for myself, I don't want to sprint. That only came later.”
Still, Zabel was clear about the demands of the sport. “If
Ayuso gives interviews in which he seems stubborn, he's standing in his own
way. Instead, he could say: 'I've made mistakes, I respect Almeida and I'll
help him.' Then the game wouldn't be over yet.”
The debate around Ayuso filled the headlines not only
because of his behaviour but also because of how competitive the Vuelta had
become. “The entire field has shrunk down brutally,” Ullrich noted after the
team time trial. Over 24 kilometers, the difference between the winning UAE
Emirates squad and the tenth-placed team was little more than half a minute.
“There weren't such close gaps in our time,” he added.