Stage favourite Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek) sprinted to his third victory of 2026 on stage 4 of the UAE Tour, powering ahead of his rivals in the fast, flat finish in Fujairah which saw the break only caught in the final 300m.

Coming round the four remaining breakaway riders in sight of the line, it was a slightly messy drag to the finish, but the powerful Milan proved fastest, beating Ethan Vernon (NSN Cycling) into second, with his younger brother Matteo Milan (Groupama-FDJ United) in third.

Finishing safely in the bunch, stage 3 winner Antonio Tiberi (Bahrain Victorious) continues to lead the race and will wear the red jersey again on Friday’s flat stage.

A breakaway of five riders – Georg Steinhauser (EF Education-EasyPost), Stefan de Bod (Modern Adventure Pro Cycling), Lorenzo Milesi (Movistar), Patrick Gamper (Jayco AlUla) and James Knox (Picnic PostNL) – had been out front all day, working hard to try and make it to the finish line ahead of the peloton, and after Knox was dropped in the final hour, the remaining four almost did. But when the sprint trains opened up, they were swept up with only a few hundred metres remaining.

“I have to say the truth: yes,” Milan said when asked if he doubted whether the peloton would catch the break.

“We knew that this breakaway was really strong, we were always keeping them at two, three minutes during the race. I have to say that my guys were really strong to keep them under control, they did really big work, I have to thank them as always.

“We just [caught] them after one kilometre to go, and then I was a bit more relaxed, but in a sprint you’re never so relaxed. We knew that it would be a bit stressful in the last kilometres because there was this big straight and there’s always a bit of a washing machine [effect].

“It’s tough to stay all together, but my team was there, they did a really fantastic job, always keeping me in the first position, and they delivered me in a good way, so I just had to sprint, and I’m really happy with my performance.”

It was a family affair at the finish, with the Milan brothers competing against each other in a WorldTour sprint for the first time, and both finishing in the top three.

“I’m really happy also for him,” Jonathan said of Matteo. “I knew that he could do really good. Just after the finish line he told me ‘Hey, I finished third,’ so I’m even more happy.

“I’m glad that he didn’t beat me today, but maybe one day he will be there. I’m happy for my victory and for his first top three in a WorldTour race. That means a lot for him and for his team.”

2026 UAE Tour: race leader Antonio Tiberi before the start

2026 UAE Tour: race leader Antonio Tiberi before the start (Image credit: Getty Images)

FirstCycling