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Belgian Waffle Ride ‘Dubbel’: Easton Overland’s Rob Britton, Caroline Dezendorf win day two

This article originally appeared on Velo News

The ‘unroad’ racing rolled on Sunday at the Belgian Waffle Ride California, where 1,500 or so racers lined up for the 77-mile Wafer or 40-mile Wanna rides, and a few top riders who did the Waffle the day before competed for the best overall in the ‘Dubbelberg Header.’

The Easton Overland duo of former road pro Rob Britton and cyclocross racer Caroline Dezendorf won their respective divisions in the Wafer and both placed second in the Dubbelberg Header.

Flavia Oliveira (Excel Sports) and Brian Scarbrough (Competitive Metals) won the Dubbelberg Header with the lowest combined times across 214 miles of pavement, gravel, and trail.

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All the racers who did both were joking afterwards about how uninspired they were initially on Sunday morning to suit up again after a 7- or 8-hour day Saturday.

“I was looking at my kit for today, like, ‘uh, I don’t know…,'” Oliveira said. “But once we got going it was fine. Although that start was crazy!”

A police escort led the race out of San Marcos, around California State University San Marcos’ campus and up a steep climb that ground the front group down to about 20 riders.

<span class="article__caption">L-R: Emma Grant (5th), Caroline Dezendorf, (2nd), Flavia Oliveira (1st), Amity Rockwell (2nd), Amy Phillips (4th)</span> (Photo: Jake Orness)
L-R: Emma Grant (5th), Caroline Dezendorf, (2nd), Flavia Oliveira (1st), Amity Rockwell (2nd), Amy Phillips (4th) (Photo: Jake Orness)

Britton, a former Tour of Utah winner, played a role in driving the group on the climb. Then he would go on to attack and attack until he was solo, with more than two thirds of the race still to go.

His legs felt better than the day before, when he experienced both legs locking up with cramps.

“I have felt a lot of things in racing over the years, but I had never had that. It was biblical,” he joked. “I felt so much better today than yesterday.”

Dezendorf had a similar experience.

For a time, Dezendorf was riding with Oliveira -- who was second to Mo Wilson on Saturday -- and Amity Rockwell, who was eleventh on Saturday after a crash.

“I dropped my chain and lost Amity, but later caught Flavia,” she said. “Then I chased onto a group of guys, and we rode together the whole way. So I had a good group, and yeah, felt way better than yesterday.”

“But today was like long-format 'cross. It was just flat and sandy, so I was like, this is my jam. I was stoked,” she said. “Yesterday was brutal. The dirt sections were fun, but it was so hard.”

<span class="article__caption">L-R: Rob Britton (2nd), Brian Scarbrough (1st), Innokenty Zavyalov (3rd), David Sweet (5th) </span> (Photo: Jake Orness)
L-R: Rob Britton (2nd), Brian Scarbrough (1st), Innokenty Zavyalov (3rd), David Sweet (5th) (Photo: Jake Orness)

Men’s Dubbelberg Header winner Scarbrough echoed the others in saying he was apprehensive to get back on the bike, but actually felt better once racing.

“Today was definitely more of an enjoyable day,” said Scarbrough, who won the U.S. national Cat 1 cross-country championship in 2016. “I woke up today and didn't know if I didn't want to do it. But after first 10 miles, I felt fresh. And I was actually able to put out more power than yesterday. Which is pretty odd.”

Scarbrough works full time as the head fabricator and designer at AlumiCraft, which makes off-road race cars. He’s a longtime mountain bike racer, who was seventh at the 2019 BWR California.

On Saturday, Scarbrough was in the lead group of 15 leading into race’s decisive midway point, where race winner Alexey Vermeulen drove a hard pace through a technical section.

<span class="article__caption">Scarbrough drops into the finishing circuit.</span>
Scarbrough drops into the finishing circuit.

“There, it went from a 75 percent effort to a 105 percent effort for me,” Scarbrough said. “A kid bobbled right in front of me, and then there were five us who just couldn’t close the gap to the leading 10 or so riders.”

On Sunday, Scarbrough was second to Britton. “There was somewhat of an established chase group behind Britton,” he said. “But we couldn't really get organized to work together. But he was riding so strong, we would have had to have a few good people to pull him in.”

The Belgian Waffle Ride continues this year with three more events, in North Carolina, Utah, and Kansas. VeloNews will continue coverage of all the BWR events.

Women

Name

Team

Waffle

Wafer

Total

1

Flavia Oliveira Parks

Excel Sports-Groove

7h 56m 52s

4h 30m 47s

12h 27m 39s

2

Caroline Dezendorf

Easton Overland-Cervelo

8h 06m 17s

4h 25m 56s

12h 32m 13s

3

Amity Rockwell

Trek-Easton

8h 30m 27s

4h 31m 43s

13h 02m 11s

Men

Name

Team

Waffle

Wafer

Total

1

Brian Scarbrough

Competitive Metals

7h 08m 15s

3h 51m 59s

11h 00m 15s

2

Robert Britton

Easton Overland-Wirth It

7h 20m 33s

3h 45m 01s

11h 05m 34s

3

Innokenty Zavyalov

Mazda-Lauf

7h 13m 59s

4h 01m 21s

11h 15m 20s

Check out the complete Dubbelberg Header results here.

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