Bio Excerpt: Bridgette LeBer learned to drive on dirt tracks in rural Wisconsin, where her father ran a small racing operation. By age sixteen, she was outpacing seasoned drivers in local sprint car competitions, earning respect through skill rather than novelty. Her aggressive yet calculated driving style caught... (full bio below ↓↓)
Bridgette LeBer
Motorcycle racer
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(last updated February 2, 2026
Bridgette LeBer is a motorcycle road racer who traded mountain bikes for sport bikes and jumped into the deep end of competitive racing through Royal Enfield’s Build Train Race program. She’s proven she can handle everything from flat track to international road racing circuits.
EARLY YEARS
Before she ever threw a leg over a motorcycle, LeBer was sending it down mountains on a bike with pedals. She competed in downhill mountain biking, tackling technical terrain at speed—the kind of riding that requires split-second decisions and zero hesitation. That background gave her something crucial: an understanding of lines, body position, and how to stay calm when things get sketchy. When she eventually switched to motorcycles, she wasn’t starting from scratch. She already knew what it felt like to push limits on two wheels.
OTHER INTERESTS
Information not available.
EARLY SUCCESS
Bridgette’s entry into motorcycle racing came through Royal Enfield’s Build Train Race (BTR) program in 2022[1][2]. The program is exactly what it sounds like: participants build their own Royal Enfield Continental GT 650 race bike, get professional training, then compete in a dedicated race series alongside MotoAmerica events. It’s designed to take riders with little to no road racing experience and turn them into legitimate competitors. For someone coming from mountain biking, it was a steep learning curve—new machine, new speeds, new rules. But LeBer took to it. She wasn’t just there to participate; she showed up to race. At the Brainerd International Raceway round in 2022, she demonstrated her growing skillset against a field of women who were all learning on the fly[3]. By the end of her first BTR season, she’d proven she could hold her own in a competitive environment.
NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS
- 2022: Competed in Royal Enfield Build Train Race program[1][2].
- 2022: Raced at Brainerd International Raceway in BTR series[3].
- 2025: Competed in Baja International Tourist Cup road race at Autodromo de Tijuana, Mexico[4][5].
INSPIRATIONS
Information not available.
REPUTATION
LeBer’s reputation is built on guts and consistency. She’s not the rider who talks the biggest game or courts the most attention, but she’s the one who shows up, does the work, and keeps improving. People in the paddock know her as someone who transitioned from a completely different discipline and didn’t blink when things got hard. Her mountain biking background gives her a different perspective than riders who grew up on pavement—she’s used to reading terrain, adjusting on the fly, and trusting her instincts when the margin for error is thin. That adaptability has translated well to road racing, where conditions change, bikes behave unpredictably, and you’ve got to make fast calls. She’s built credibility by being consistent and unafraid to take on new challenges, including racing internationally. The BTR community and those who follow women’s motorcycle road racing recognize her as someone who’s serious about progression. She’s not chasing Instagram fame—she’s chasing lap times.
FUTURE GOALS/PLANS
Information not available.
REFERENCES
[1] MotoAmerica: Royal Enfield Announces 2022 Build Train Race Program
[2] RoadracingWorld: MotoAmerica The Women of Royal Enfield Build Train Race 2022
[3] WomanRider: Buyck Tops Racing at Brainerd Build Train Race
[4] Baja Tarma Racing: Baja International Tourist Cup
[5] Road Racing News: 2025 Baja International Tourist Cup Digest







