Israel-Premier Tech owner Sylvan Adams has claimed that he has rejected requests from organisers for the under-fire team to leave the Vuelta a España, amid an ongoing series of pro-Palestine protests at the Spanish grand tour, arguing that withdrawing from the race would amount to “surrender to the terrorists”.

The Canadian-Israeli billionaire also dismissed recent reports that the squad is considering changing its name ahead of the 2026 season, branding the speculation “fake news” and asserting that his squad “will never ride without the name Israel”.

Following Adams’ comments, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the team on social media “for not giving in to hate and intimidation”.

Netanyahu praises Israel-Premier Tech
Netanyahu praises Israel-Premier Tech (Image Credit: Twitter)

Earlier on Friday, we reported that Israel-Premier Tech had firmly denied any suggestion that references to Israel will be removed from the team’s jersey and branding next season, in response to the protests against the squad’s ongoing participation in major cycling events amid Israel’s war in Gaza.

A spokesperson for the squad – the subject of an intense series of pro-Palestine protests at the Vuelta a España – told road.cc that the reports are “not true” and that there are currently “no plans to change the team name”.

Israel-Premier Tech owner Adams has since weighed in on the rumours himself in an interview with Israeli media, reaffirming his previous remarks that he will refuse to alter the squad’s “longstanding identity as an Israeli-based team, open to all”.

“Fake news. We will never ride without the name Israel,” he told Sport5 on Friday.

Sylvan Adams at the 2023 UCI world cycling championships Gran Fondo, Perth
Sylvan Adams at the 2023 UCI world cycling championships Gran Fondo, Perth (Image Credit: Allan McKenzie/SWpix.com)

Despite what its name and branding might suggest – especially in a sport where Bahrain and the UAE also serve as title sponsors – Israel-Premier Tech is not officially state-owned. Instead, it is funded by Canadian-Israeli billionaire Adams, one of Canada’s biggest real estate investors, who emigrated to Israel in 2015.

Nevertheless, the squad has received some funding from Israel’s ministry for tourism and Adams – who attended Donald Trump’s inauguration, encouraged US attacks on Iran in June, and called on Israel to “finish the job” in Gaza – has described the team as “ambassadors” for Israel and a means of promoting a “more realistic vision” of modern Israel.

That ambassadorial role trumpeted by Adams has no doubt fuelled the growing number of protests by pro-Palestine activists against the team’s ongoing involvement at cycling’s biggest races, with things coming to a head this week at the Vuelta, where Wednesday’s stage in Bilbao was truncated following rowdy scenes at the finish.

Protesters have also run onto the road in front of the riders in recent days, including on Friday on the fearsome Alto de L’Angliru, causing the breakaway to come to a halt after demonstrators blocked their path with what appeared to be rope.

However, despite the protests, as well as safety concerns raised by their colleagues in the peloton, Israel-Premier Tech has insisted it will continue racing at the Vuelta, claiming that “any other course of action sets a dangerous precedent in the sport of cycling”.

Israel-Premier Tech ride past Palestine flags, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta
Israel-Premier Tech ride past Palestine flags, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

And speaking to Sport5, Adams claimed that ASO, the owner of Vuelta organiser Unipublic, has asked him to withdraw the team from the race, a request he rejected.

“The CEO of ASO, Yann Le Moënner, also asked to remove the team from the race, but I told them that I was not going to do that,” Adams said.

“If we give up, it’s not just the end of our team, but of all the other teams. Tomorrow they will demonstrate against the teams from Bahrain, the UAE, and Astana.

“There is no end to the boycotts. They asked us to quit the Vuelta, but we did not surrender to the terrorists. I told them that they were wrong and that we had the right to stay.”

The 66-year-old also claimed that, despite ASO’s request, he has the “overwhelming support” of UCI president David Lappartient.

Meanwhile, Adams – who was following the race in the team car when the chaotic scenes in Bilbao prompted the organisers to curtail the stage with 3km to go – also criticised the pro-Palestine protesters at the Vuelta, branding them “terrorists”.

Pro-Palestine protest, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta, Bilbao
Pro-Palestine protest, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta, Bilbao (Image Credit: RTVE)

“We had two extremely difficult days in the Basque Country,” he said. “The region is known as a stronghold of far-left activists and separatists who like to protest. They are not our friends, that’s for sure.

“I remind you that in the 1960s and 1970s, the Basque underground [separatist group] ETA operated and formed an alliance with the PLO.

“We were not surprised by this unfriendly welcome, and yet I have never seen anything like this in a cycling race. A huge and disproportionate number of flags and signs for Palestine and against the State of Israel and enormous amounts of hatred.”

He continued: “In an unusual move, I decided to sit in the team car for the first time to monitor what was happening and make a decision in an extreme case. It was important to me to be there for the riders, some of whom feel threatened.

“They poured paint on our car, and at the end of the stage you all saw the rioters pushing the barriers and trying to break onto the course.

“The decision not to compete in the last 3km was the right one. It was not safe for the riders. The police tried to do their best in my opinion.

“I call this violent group terrorists because they are violent people. In the end, they destroyed all the fans’ bikes. The Basques have the best fans in the world and it’s a shame it ended like this.”

> “No plans” for Israel-Premier Tech to drop ‘Israel’ from name, as sports director blasts “King of the Vuelta” Matteo Jorgenson’s calls for squad to leave race following protests

However, Adams also insisted that, despite the growing calls for his team to quit the Vuelta, they had also received support from across Spain.

“There were people in Spain who were disgusted by the whole thing, and we really got support on the road,” the 66-year-old said.

“There were a lot of people who encouraged us. Ultimately, we are a sports team and we want to compete and win. We want to continue to build the young riders that we develop in Israel Cycling Academy and that’s what we will continue to do.

“I always say that the best thing you can do is win and silence the naysayers, and I believe we can do that in the final stage in Madrid with Ethan Vernon, our sprinter.”

Israel-Premier Tech’s Marco Frigo rides past spectator with Palestine flag, stage 7, 2025 Vuelta
Israel-Premier Tech’s Marco Frigo rides past spectator with Palestine flag, stage 7, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Adams’ comments come after Spain’s Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares became the most high-profile figure yet to call for Israel-Premier Tech to be removed from the Vuelta. Speaking on the Spanish public broadcaster, Radio Nacional de España, Albares confirmed he would support the team’s exclusion.

“I understand it, and I would certainly be in favour of it,” he said, while stressing that it is not the Spanish government but cycling’s governing body, the UCI, who has the power to decide which teams can participate in races.

Albares pointed directly to the precedent of the expulsion of Russian and Belarussian squads, including Russian ProTeam Gazprom-Rusvelo, from the sport in 2022, following the invasion of Ukraine.

“We cannot continue to maintain a normal relationship with Israel as if nothing were happening,” he said.

“Because we have to send a message to Israel, to Israeli society. They have to understand that Europe and Israel can only co-operate – as stated in Article 2 of the EU-Israel trade agreement – when human rights are respected, because as democratic countries we relate to each other in that way.”