Most 12-year-olds are still learning the basics of riding. Alfie Barraclough is already rewriting British land speed record books.
Earlier this month, the young racer from Bradford traveled to Pendine Sands and walked away with four new UK junior land speed records in the under-100cc category. Even more impressive: it was his first time ever riding on sand.
Competing during the May 2–4 speed trials weekend, Alfie set new standing-start benchmarks across the 500-meter, kilometer, quarter-mile, and half-mile classes. His recorded speeds reached 49.521 mph, 54.952 mph, 55.613 mph, and 58.614 mph respectively — serious numbers considering both the small-displacement motorcycle and the notoriously difficult riding surface.
Sand speed racing is very different from conventional track riding.
Unlike asphalt, where grip is predictable and relatively stable, sand constantly shifts beneath the tires. Maintaining traction becomes one of the biggest challenges, especially during launches where too much throttle can instantly destroy momentum. For experienced riders, Pendine’s surface already demands careful throttle control and balance. For a 12-year-old riding there for the first time, the learning curve is steep.

That makes Alfie’s performance stand out beyond the raw speeds themselves.
According to his father, Karl Barraclough, the team intentionally chose a relatively manageable motorcycle setup to avoid overwhelming the young rider on the loose surface. The custom-built drag bike uses a modified 70cc engine sourced from a Gilera DNA scooter platform — not exactly the kind of machine normally associated with record attempts.
But simplicity turned out to be an advantage.
The lower-powered setup helped reduce wheelspin off the line, allowing Alfie to build speed progressively instead of fighting the terrain. In land speed racing, especially on sand, consistency and control often matter more than outright horsepower.
That approach reflects a surprisingly mature racing philosophy.
Rather than chasing unrealistic top speeds, Alfie and his team appear focused on incremental progress and repeatable performance. His father noted that Alfie tends to carefully observe other racers before riding, quietly studying techniques and adapting rather than relying on raw aggression or confidence alone.
That mindset is already producing results.
At just 12 years old, Alfie has now accumulated 27 speed records across various categories, including previous tarmac-based achievements that made him the UK’s youngest land speed record holder at age nine. He has also competed in sidecar speed attempts alongside fellow young racer Jack Taylor.
The Pendine achievement adds another layer to that growing résumé because sand racing carries its own unique history within British motorsport culture.
Pendine Sands has hosted land speed record attempts for over a century and remains one of the most iconic speed venues in the UK. Legendary engineers and racers once used the seven-mile Welsh beach to chase outright world records long before modern racetracks existed. More recently, the late Zef Eisenberg set the current motorcycle benchmark there at over 201 mph aboard a heavily modified Suzuki Hayabusa.
Alfie’s speeds are obviously operating in a completely different category, but the spirit behind them remains remarkably similar: adapting machinery, rider skill, and environment to push measurable limits.
What makes stories like this compelling isn’t simply the numbers. It’s the discipline behind them.
Youth motorsport can sometimes drift toward spectacle or social-media-driven hype, but Alfie’s progression appears grounded in patient development, mentorship, and realistic goals. His father describes someone who already understands the work required to improve rather than simply chasing attention.
That may ultimately matter more than any individual record.
With the Pendine records now secured, Alfie is already preparing for the next challenge: Straightliners Speed Week at Elvington Airfield later this year. And judging by his current trajectory, it’s unlikely these latest records will stand uncontested for long.
In a motorsport world increasingly dominated by expensive technology and professionalized pathways, Alfie Barraclough’s rise feels refreshingly straightforward — a young rider, a small motorcycle, and a relentless focus on getting just a little bit faster every time out.


