Flung into last year’s Vuelta a España as a last-minute substitution for Picnic PostNL‘s ill leader Max Poole, just a glance at the subsequent results sheets shows how keenly Kevin Vermaerke followed what was likely the only instruction on the Picnic team bus message board each morning: ‘Get into breaks.’

But whenever Vermaerke did get into a breakaway at the Vuelta – no fewer than six in nine days, five of them over 100 kilometres long – there was one thing about all of them that hardly ever changed, he said at December’s off-season training camp with his new squad, UAE Team Emirates-XRG.

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“But unfortunately, I always found myself up against someone that was a little bit stronger and” – and he gestures at his new colleagues around the plush Benidorm hotel, also sitting in armchairs talking to journalists – “usually from this team.”

2026 AlUla Tour: Vermaerke (6-L) in the middle of the pack during his first race with his new team.

2026 AlUla Tour: Vermaerke (6-L) in the middle of the pack during his first race with his new team. (Image credit: Getty Images)

Brandon McNulty, at UAE offered him another reason to sign on the dotted line. Indeed, when it comes to acting as an inspiration, Vermaerke instantly responds: “For sure. What he has done is incredible.”

“He’s really one of the best riders in the world, and we all saw what he did in Montreal last year” – winning the Canadian WorldTour race alongside teammate Tadej Pogačar – “and his palmares is really impressive and we were on the same junior team, LUX Cycling, back in the day too.”

“But just, you know, having another American on the team is always really nice, and yeah, I’d love to kind of hopefully follow in his footsteps, too.”

The move into UAE in some ways is an obvious one, given their hugely successful status, the way they’ve worked so well with McNulty – who was on a leading US ProTeam, Rally UHC, before moving up a league to UAE in 2020 – and the considerably higher level of resources they enjoy compared to Picnic PostNL. Furthermore, the fact that Vermaerke hadn’t actually won a race yet, despite coming close on many occasions, suggests that it was time to move. But was it a case of something being unfulfilled or more that he’s reached the end of a particular journey, he was asked.

“I think a bit of both,” Vermaerke said. “I mean, I felt like I had kind of maxed out my time there, and I think in order for me to keep growing and take the next step in my career, I really needed to push myself into something new.

“A team like UAE provides not only the material support and the resources that Picnic doesn’t have, but also the competitive environment is something that I experienced with Axel Merckx’ team” – Hagens-Berman-Axeon, where he raced from 2019 to 2020 – “at U23, with guys I’m teammates with like Mikkel Bjerg and João Almeida, some of the best U23s in the world.

“That really brought the whole level of the team up, and I think that’s why UAE is so so competitive. It’s just everybody’s pushing each other in a really healthy way, and that’s something I think will help me get the most out of myself.”

2022 Tour of Oman: Kevin Vermaerke (r) recovering after a stage near former UAE rider Rui Costa, also seated (l)

Kevin Vermaerke recovering after a stage of the 2022 Tour of Oman (Image credit: Getty Images)

Onley was confirmed as moving from Picnic to Ineos Grenadiers.

2025 Vuelta a España: Kevin Vermaerke, still with his former team, during a break

2025 Vuelta a España: Kevin Vermaerke, still with his former team, during a break (Image credit: Getty Images)

As the most successful squad of 2025, UAE Team Emirates are in a very different place. Essentially, the bar literally could not be higher for Vermaerke and the targets could not be clearer. As such, it’s the definitive opportunity to prove himself and rather than be intimidated by it – as some riders can be – he’s embracing it with both arms.

“Matteo [Jorgenson] said it really well a few years ago when he went from Movistar to Visma. He spoke about how you reach a point where you feel established in the WorldTour and it is going to be my sixth season in it, next year [2026].

“But, I’ve always been feeling like I’m searching for something a little bit more, and I think coming in a team like this where I have the best coaches, best nutritionists, best teammates, and you know they’re going to give me a race program where it’s up to me to ultimately use those tools to prove myself. That’s what I want to do.

“The sky’s the limit and I’m not going to say this is my definitive goal or I want to do this or that. But I just want to get the most out of myself and then see where I end up.

“At least then you can have no regrets, you truly knew what your potential was. So I think this is the best place for me to find that potential.”