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Determination fuels road-race winners

Megan Rathwell and Adam deVos, both of Victoria, conquered the climbs in the hills of Metchosin to win the women’s and men’s titles respectively, Saturday morning in the Westhills Road Classic. The event, which also doubles as the B.C.
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Megan Rathwell, left, wins the womenÍs B.C. road championship in Metchosin, with Nik Vogler, centre, and Kristine Brynjolfson in the chase during Day 2 of the Robert W. Cameron Law Cycling Series on Saturday.

Megan Rathwell and Adam deVos, both of Victoria, conquered the climbs in the hills of Metchosin to win the women’s and men’s titles respectively, Saturday morning in the Westhills Road Classic.

The event, which also doubles as the B.C. road championships, was the second event of the Robert W. Cameron Law Cycling Series.

Rathwell won the 80-kilometre women’s road race in two hours, 29 minutes and 31 seconds. Mical Dyck, Nik Vogler and Kristine Brynjolfson finished second through fourth, respectively, recording the same times.

“This is a super tough course,” said Rathwell, who was second in the 2012 B.C. championships.

“But I knew I could win if it came down to a sprint.”

The 20-year-old deVos showed why he is considered one of Canada’s rising young riders by overtaking the lead pack at about the halfway point in winning the 120-kilometre men’s race in 3:03:59. Runner-up Dylan Davies of Vancouver was 1:04 behind and third-place Ryan Anderson 3:23 in arrears.

“I knew Dylan was super strong and a hard worker,” said deVos.

“But if we worked together, I knew I could take it in the end. It’s pretty special to be B.C. champion. It’s nice to beat guys like Rob [Britton] and Ryan [Anderson] as they are respected professionals.”

The Cameron Cycling series began Friday evening with Curtis Deardon of Victoria winning the five-kilometre men’s Rumble individual time trial along Dallas Road in an explosive 6:28:00. Jesse Reams of Vancouver and Craig Richey of Victoria placed second and third, respectively, in an identical 6:32. Veteran pro Britton of Victoria, the two-time defending champion, was fourth in 6:38.

Kristine Brynolfson, a long-distance triathlete from Kamloops, won the women’s time trial in 7:42. Rathwell was second in 7:45 and top-ranked Canadian cyclo-cross rider Mical Dyck of Victoria third in 7:47.

The Cameron Cycling Series concludes today with the Russ Hay’s Accent Inns Bastion Square Grand Prix, which features spoke-to-spoke racing around tight downtown streets including the infamous Crash Corner at Yates and Wharf streets. Races start at 8 a.m. with the women’s elite race at noon and the men’s elite at 1 p.m.

Brynolfson and Britton take the series Omnium overall women’s and men’s leader’s jerseys into today’s final day.