Oscar Onley began last week’s Volta a Catalunya with the sort of youthful exuberance and innocence that only 20 year olds can have. “You don’t really think about it because it just happens naturally,” he said of starting his first WorldTour stage race.
By the end of the week and two breakaways later, he was a spent figure. It had been an exhausting seven days. He’d come up against his own limits, faced down numerous savage ascents, and learned a thing or two about racing with the very elite on the toughest of stages. “The level’s a bit higher than what I have been used to so far,” he analysed. “I haven’t got the best legs to hold onto the top guys yet.”
A neo-pro with DSM, after two years impressing for their development team, the Scotsman rose to prominence last October when he finished third at the CRO Tour, only Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard and Milan-Sanremo victor Matej Mohorič above him.
Catalunya, however, was an altogether different type of race, not least because of its position in the calendar. The big-hitters, Primož Roglič and Remco Evenepoel, were here, intent on taking chunks out of each other at every point.
Carnage was promised, and carnage was delivered.
Just being on the startline was an achievement when Onley, financially backed last year by The Rayner Foundation, allowed himself to consider the speed of his progression. “If I look at where I was this time last year, and now I am doing my first WorldTour stage race, it’s a big step. I’m happy to be here,” he smiled.
He didn’t waste any time in trying to force an impression, jumping straight into a five-man break on the opening stage, on the recommendation of team DS Matt Winston. “In the past, stage one has been a sprint, but it’s also gone to the breakaway, so we thought there was maybe a chance it could survive,” Winston said. As it happened, Onley never really thought they’d last the distance. “Not really, no!” he laughed. “We never got given much of a gap all day.” Six kilometres from the finish, they were swallowed up.