logo
Next stop global fame for the unassuming Scot who announced his arrival in this year's Tour de France

Next stop global fame for the unassuming Scot who announced his arrival in this year's Tour de France

Daily Mail​7 days ago
It will no doubt take some days yet for the magnitude of what Oscar Onley has achieved at the Tour de France to sink in.
The Scottish rider has been the breakout star of this year's race. Onley took to the start line fresh from a strong showing at the Tour de Suisse — yet few could have predicted the dizzying heights he would scale.
We're not just talking about his blistering ascents of Mont Ventoux and the Col de la Loze. Onley, 22, has been up there rubbing shoulders with the best in the world, a Who's Who of cycling including contemporary greats Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard.
The man from Kelso has announced his arrival on the global stage, finishing an incredible fourth in the general classification (GC) standings.
It's a colossal accomplishment, equalling the previous highest overall finish by a Scot, Philippa York (who competed as Robert Millar) in 1984.
Could Onley have imagined being in this position three weeks ago? Possibly not. He came into the Tour with the sole goal of chasing stage wins, supported by his Picnic PostNL team.
He has fought tooth and nail across every inch of tarmac and lofty mountain pass. Nor did it take long to make his mark. Onley finished sixth in Boulogne- sur-Mer on stage two as the seeds of a bold dream took root. After that, the top 10 finishes came thick and fast.
Onley took third on stage seven from Saint-Malo to Mur-de-Bretagne, crossing the line hot on the heels of Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) and Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) who — with a raft of Grand Tour wins and titles between them — were first and second respectively.
He finished fourth in Rouen, fifth on the Hautacam, sixth from Pau to Luchon-Superbagneres and fourth up the Col de la Loze, the queen stage of this year's Tour.
The tenacity and talent it takes to produce these Herculean efforts day after day should not be underestimated. Onley, who cut his teeth pedalling around the roads of the Scottish Borders, is the cycling equivalent of Clark Kent becoming Superman.
Although a coveted stage win eluded him, 'the Kelso Comet' found himself steadily climbing the GC rankings.
While the anticipated showdown between Pogacar and Vingegaard has had fans gripped, the fierce battle between Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-Bora Hansgrohe) and Onley for the third step on the podium also captivated millions.
The weight of expectation on Onley's shoulders must have felt immense, but he continued to strive with every sinew. On Thursday evening, just 22 seconds stood between third-placed Lipowitz and Onley in fourth.
Friday's summit finish on La Plagne was a tough day at the office, with Onley fading in the last kilometres. He claimed fifth, his eighth top 10 finish of the Tour. Sadly, though, the time gap between the pair had widened to over a minute, an insurmountable chasm as the race reached its final stages.
Throughout his storming performances, Onley has retained the air of a young man still pinching himself in disbelief. 'It's not really sunk in yet,' he said after his world-class ride on stage four.
As he warmed down outside the team bus, Onley reportedly pulled out his phone to double-check the result online. It read: Tadej Pogacar, Mathieu van der Poel, Jonas Vingegaard, Oscar Onley. A star was born.
On paper, Onley is the archetypal overnight success. Some commentators have referred to him as the 'surprise sensation' of the Tour.
However, the hard graft and sacrifice that have brought him to the upper echelons of the sport should not be downplayed.
Having started out as a promising cross-country runner, he joined the Kelso Wheelers Cycling Club aged 10, keen to emulate the riders he saw whizzing around the local time trial route past his house.
Watching the Tour de France on TV as a youngster also lit a fire, with Onley citing vivid memories of the epic clash between Alberto Contador and Andy Schleck on the Col du Tourmalet in 2010.
He would have been seven at the time. Fast forward 15 years and he is duelling with cycling adversaries in the Pyrenees, inspiring a new generation of riders into the bargain.
While he raced at youth level, it wasn't until joining the junior and under-23 ranks that he began to take his cycling more seriously.
A strong time-trialist and climber on the road, his lack of suitability as a track rider — due to his self- confessed 'tiny' frame — meant he didn't follow the traditional pathway through the British Cycling programme, instead exploring the development team racing scene in Europe.
In 2019, after competing in France with Scottish Cycling, he signed with Van Rysel-AG2R La Mondiale and had a promising stint with the feeder squad. Only 16, he began honing his French in preparation.
Onley joined Development Team DSM in 2021, where his endeavours included a memorable tussle with two-time Tour de France winner Vingegaard at the 2022 CRO Race. Onley stepped up to WorldTour level with Team dsm-firmenich (now Picnic–PostNL) in 2023.
He made his Grand Tour debut at the Vuelta a Espana that same year, playing a key role in the team time trial victory on the opening stage. He crashed out on stage two, suffering a broken collarbone and withdrawing.
Onley returned to sparkling form at the 2024 Santos Tour Down Under. At Willunga Hill on stage five, he took his first individual World Tour win.
Yet Onley's story quickly racked up more twists and turns than a hairpin-bend climb.
Barely a week after his maiden professional victory, he fractured his collarbone again while competing at the 2024 Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race.
Then came a third collarbone break at the 2024 Amstel Gold Race — making it a trio of injuries within eight months.
Onley soon showed his mettle as the comeback kid. The formidable mindset which has served him well this year came to the fore.
While Onley later acknowledged that being sidelined for the third time in less than a year was 'pretty tough', he used his recuperation to take a step back and regroup, mentally and physically.
Rather than wallow, Onley 'switched off from cycling', buying Lego to keep his 'mind busy' and avoid doomscrolling on his phone.
It reaped dividends. After returning at the 2024 Tour de Suisse, he was named in his team's roster for that year's Tour de France.
Speaking to Mail Sport ahead of his Tour debut last July, Onley described it as 'a childhood dream'.
He finished a credible 39th in the GC standings, with a fifth place on stage 17. Not even Onley could have imagined, though, the riveting head-to-head he would find himself in a year later, catapulting him from future star to podium contender.
Over the past 12 months, he has taken second overall at the 2024 Tour of Britain and won the best young rider classification — as well as being the highest-placed British rider — at the 2024 Road World Championships in Zurich.
This year has seen Onley garner a series of top 10 GC finishes, including third at last month's Tour de Suisse. Which brings us back to the here and now.
There will be much to unpack from his phenomenal Tour de France, and it's important to remember he is still only halfway through a five-year development plan drafted by Picnic PostNL.
What has unfolded on the roads of France is merely the beginning. Surely the next stop is superstardom.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lando Norris ready to go all the way in championship battle with Oscar Piastri
Lando Norris ready to go all the way in championship battle with Oscar Piastri

The Independent

time25 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Lando Norris ready to go all the way in championship battle with Oscar Piastri

Lando Norris believes his championship battle with Oscar Piastri will go to the wire following his victory at Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix. Norris started third and dropped to fifth after a poor first corner at the Hungaroring before he rolled the strategy dice – stopping one less time than his rivals – to take the lead and then held off Piastri's late charge in a brilliant finale. Piastri came within centimetres of colliding with Norris on the penultimate lap when he momentarily lost control of his McLaren as he attempted a banzai move for the win. But Norris survived and held his nerve to keep the fast-charging Australian at bay to land his fifth win of the season – his third in his last four appearances – taking the chequered flag just six tenths clear and reducing the championship deficit to nine points with 10 rounds remaining. Max Verstappen, who finished ninth on Sunday, remains in third in the standings but 97 points off the championship pace. 'I'm dead,' said Norris. 'In the final stint Oscar was catching and I was pushing flat out. My voice has gone a little bit. 'It has been a tough battle so far with Oscar and it is going to continue to be tough. The margins between us are pretty small. There are things I can do better and improve on, and I am sure he will probably say the same thing. So, it is going to be a good and tough fight, probably until the end. 'Even though the results have looked great, I'm not making my life very easy at the minute. If I can work on those things, then I'll be in a better place.' Norris' win in the concluding round before the summer break reignites his bid to land a maiden world crown. But the Bristolian can count himself somewhat fortunate to be standing on the top step of the podium. At the start, Norris got away well from his marks, but an attempt to pass Piastri on the inside of the opening corner backfired. Norris did not commit to the overtake and that left him in no-man's land, allowing George Russell and then Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso to breeze through. On lap three, Norris fought his way clear of Alonso but was then tucked up behind Russell and making little progress. Piastri and Charles Leclerc, who controlled the first stint of the race from pole position, stopped for new tyres on laps 18 and 19 respectively. Russell also peeled into the pits on lap 19 promoting Norris to the front. McLaren were now considering a one-stop strategy. Norris' race engineer, Will Joseph, was on the radio: 'Lando, 40 laps on the hard tyre, you up for it?' Norris replied: 'Yeah, why not?' On lap 31 of 70, the Englishman came in for his sole change of tyres before lighting up the timesheets with the fastest laps of the race so far. In his haste to catch up, Norris then dropped two wheels through the gravel on the exit of the chicane, which irked Joseph. 'Lando, just keep the focus, we don't want these mistakes,' he said. Leclerc, Piastri and Russell were all forced to stop again. When it all shuffled out, Norris led Leclerc by seven seconds, with Piastri five seconds further back. But Piastri was on the move, swatting Leclerc aside on lap 51 and then set about reducing Norris' nine-second advantage. With five laps to go, Piastri was just a second behind his team-mate, and on the penultimate lap, the Australian went for glory at the first bend. However, Norris retained his composure and remained ahead to land what could be a pivotal win in his championship charge. Russell took the final place on the podium with Leclerc a disappointed fourth. The next race takes place in the Netherlands on August 31.

Norwich sign Serbia midfielder Topic
Norwich sign Serbia midfielder Topic

BBC News

time26 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Norwich sign Serbia midfielder Topic

Norwich City have signed Serbia international midfielder Mirko Topic on a four-year deal, with a further year's 24-year-old has played for Familicao in the Portuguese Primeira Liga for the past two seasons, after spending his first four years as a senior player with his hometown club won the Serbian Cup in his first season with Vojvodina and has won four caps for his country."I'm very proud to now be a part of this club and this city," he told the club website., external"I spoke to [Canaries goalkeeper] Vladan Kovacevic a couple of weeks ago, and also the coach and sporting director. They convinced me to come when they showed me the goals and ambitions for this season."Topic becomes the third midfielder to join the Canaries in a squad overhaul following last season's disappointing campaign, with Jacob Wright arriving from Manchester City and Jeffrey Schlupp from Crystal Palace.

I'm not making easy for myself
I'm not making easy for myself

BBC News

time26 minutes ago

  • BBC News

I'm not making easy for myself

Lando Norris admitted after his victory in the Hungarian Grand Prix that he was "not making life very easy" for himself in his title battle with team-mate Oscar win closes the gap to his McLaren team-mate in the championship to nine points going into Formula 1's summer break and was his third win in the last four it came after he dropped to fifth place on the first lap after compromising himself trying to pass Piastri at the first said: "It's already tough, and it's going to continue to be tough. It's pretty small margins between us. I'm sure there's some things I can do better on and improve on, and I'm sure he'll probably say a similar thing."It's going be a long second half of the season, I'm sure, but at the same time, I'm looking forward to a nice break, a bit of time to rest and try and come back even better because there are those things I need to improve on and want to improve on."I'm not giving myself the best opportunities. Even though the results have looked great, I'm not making my life very easy for myself at the minute. So if I can work on those things, then I'll be in a better place."Hungary was the latest in a series of races in which Norris has had small issues that have cost him in the championship so far this qualified third at the Hungaroring, behind Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and Piastri, and lost positions to Mercedes' George Russell and Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso after Piastri held him tight to the inside on the run to the first had to switch to a one-stop tyre strategy to try to recover ground, and it paid off, even though McLaren did not know when they made the decision whether he would be able to make it work."It's one of the first ones I've won in probably this manner," Norris said. "I've not won many races, so most circumstances are still new, but I think it's the first one where doing a completely alternate strategy to most, giving myself that opportunity, worked out."It's a tough strategy to do, but it worked out. That's the most important thing. And, honestly, I didn't really think it was going to work for the majority of that second stint. But with every lap, I kind of gained more confidence that it was going to be closer and closer. So, yeah, definitely a rewarding one."It was Norris' fifth win of the season, compared to Piastri's six, and the two drivers expect a close fight to the end of the season when the championship resumes at the Dutch Grand Prix on 29-31 said: "It's going to be a tough second half of the year. It has been tough already, and the margins are very fine. So, I think it's going to be great watching."McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said the team would continue to allow them to race fairly between themselves."We are McLaren Racing," Stella said. "We bring the value of racing into Formula 1. So we want to give great racing for Formula 1."We want to give our two drivers the possibility to utilise, express their talent, pursue their aspirations, their personal success, and this needs to happen within the boundaries of the team interest, and the fairness, the sportsmanship, and the respect for one another. For me, this is what I see."These are the values of McLaren, and it's going to be, hopefully, a matter between the two McLaren drivers, even if we saw Ferrari today was in the competition for the victory for two thirds of the race."I think we have a very entertaining and interesting final part of the season."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store