Oscar Onley, Britain’s new GC darling, recently revealed that he no longer has a bike at his family home in Scotland. Whenever he’s back in Kelso, the town where the 23-year-old grew up, he’s there to “really, really relax” and to take a break from cycling. But that doesn’t mean he can get away with not paying subs at his local club. If he bumps into anyone from Kelso Wheelers, he’d better make sure he’s got his excuses ready – or a few bank notes in his wallet.

“Oscar’s mum Sharon is our club secretary, and she usually pays his club membership,” Kelso Wheelers chairman Robert Ure tells CW. “I’d need to have a look, but I don’t think he’s paid his membership for this year. I’m going to have to send him an arrears letter unless he pays his 20 quid,” Ure laughs, joking that the outstanding debt could follow Onley around long after he’s hung up his professional racing wheels.

“If he comes down once he’s finished and retired and still hasn’t paid his membership, there’ll be serious words with him! We will have to backdate the payments.”

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All of which is said in the best possible spirit, of course. Regardless of Onley’s technical membership status, his childhood cycling club – and the whole of the Scottish Borders – are immensely proud of him. This year, in just his second appearance at the Tour de France, he finished fourth, 72 seconds shy of a spot on the podium.

Oscar Onley

(Image credit: Getty Images)

As a result, Onley was one of the most in-demand riders in July, winning a legion of new supporters after keeping pace for long stretches with runaway leader Tadej Pogačar and his arch rival Jonas Vingegaard. ‘Onley Fans’ – a brilliant pun on the adults-only website OnlyFans – became a favoured placard slogan during the Tour, while as a hashtag #OnleyFans it went viral on Instagram, TikTok and X.

But attention and the spotlight don’t come naturally to Onley – though affable and polite, he is reserved and softly spoken. A bit like Vingegaard, he appears to be something of a reluctant superstar.

2022 CRO Race.

Over the following two years, he took his first WorldTour victory, a stage at the 2024 Tour Down Under, was an active presence in breakaways during his maiden Tour, and finished second at both the Tours of Britain and Guangxi.

2025 saw an even steeper progression. Second on the queen stages of both the Tour Down Under and UAE Tour in the early part of the year, and in June he won a stage of the Tour de Suisse, finishing third on GC. Come the Tour de France, publicly Onley and his team said he was targeting stages, but consistently high placings during the first week’s Classic-like stages were followed up by impressive performances in the Pyrenees and Alps. He was a very deserving fourth-placed finisher.

Oscar Onley

(Image credit: SWpix.com/Zac Williams)

Only last winter, Onley told CW that Picnic-PostNL were working on the assumption that their leading GC prospect, at least in Grand Tours, was Max Poole. “He’s got the one up on me on the longer climbs and in time trialling,” said Onley, “[which] means Grand Tours suit Max better, and that’s how the team have been seeing it as well.”

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Poole might still prove that assertion correct, given time, but Onley’s performance in July disproved any doubts about his own capabilities. Back then, he had seemed unsure about converting his improving results into Grand Tour success. “That’s another step, and to be honest I don’t know if I am capable of it yet.” His legs soon replied: yes, he was, and is.

Onley acknowledges that he is naturally self-deprecating – unlike the sport’s extroverts such as, say, Pogačar. Could it be a particularly Scottish trait, this keeping his head down and quietly working hard?

“I would say the main characteristics of people from where I’m from are that we’re willing to work hard,” he told Rouleur post-Tour. “Some people want things, they’re demanding, [but] I’m happy to go with whatever is happening. I think that’s natural coming from where I come from, we’re not big show people or anything. We’re down-to-earth people.”

Emily Brammeier, the head of communications at Picnic-PostNL, confirms that the team saw a leap in media requests for Onley post-Tour. He hasn’t minded the attention – it would be wrong to depict him as media-averse or painfully shy; he is not. The team has been careful to limit his media obligations to a comfortable level.

Everyone who knows Onley seems to repeat similar sentiments: he is simply a young, decent, hard-working lad from the Borders – certainly not someone who craves the limelight.

Oscar Onley

(Image credit: SWpix.com/Zac Williams)

“We tried to manage the story before and during the Tour so as not to put him on too much of a pedestal,” Brammeier says. “Since the Tour it’s also been important to give him a break and to wind down from it all. It’s always a balance: a rider only has so much energy per day, and the priority is riding a bike.

“They also need to find time for tactical discussions, time to call home and to be themselves, and time for the media and commercial activities. A lot of what we do is based on feeling, and working with riders to make sure they get the best out of themselves.”

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