Bio Excerpt: Rhianna Purcocks made her mark in British karting through sheer talent rather than backstory theatrics. The British champion carved out victories across Club 100’s arrive-and-drive series, where identical equipment strips away excuses and exposes pure driving ability. She claimed the 2023 British University Karting Championships Graduate... (full bio below ↓↓)
Rhianna Purcocks
Karting racer
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I’m excited to compete again in the Motorsport Games and this time bring back a medal for Team UK.
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(last updated 2026-01-25
Rhianna Purcocks is a British karting champion who has proven herself across Club 100, university championships, and international endurance competition, collecting titles and medals while representing Team UK on the world stage.
EARLY YEARS
The path that led Rhianna Purcocks to competitive karting remains largely undocumented in public records. What’s clear is that by the time she appeared in British karting circles, she’d already developed the skills and racecraft that would carry her through Club 100 competition and onto the national championship scene. Unlike many racers who share detailed origin stories—complete with tales of karting dads, childhood track visits, and mechanical tinkering in the garage—Purcocks has let her results speak louder than her backstory.
It’s a refreshingly no-nonsense approach that fits the karting world perfectly. In a discipline where privilege and family connections often dominate the paddock conversation, Purcocks simply showed up and raced.
OTHER INTERESTS
Beyond the track, Purcocks keeps her personal life decidedly private. There’s no public record of hobbies, side projects, or the typical social media presence that defines many modern racers. Whether this reflects genuine privacy preferences or simply a focus on racing over personal branding, it’s impossible to say. What it does suggest is someone who hasn’t felt compelled to cultivate a public persona beyond her competitive achievements—a rarity in an era when even amateur racers treat Instagram like a full-time job.
EARLY SUCCESS
Purcocks established herself in the Club 100 series, one of Britain’s most competitive arrive-and-drive karting championships. The series, known for providing identical equipment and intensely close racing, became her proving ground. She competed in the Clubman division and logged laps at venues including Buckmore Park, building the racecraft and consistency that would later translate into championship success.[4]
Her first documented international appearance came in 2019 when she partnered with Flick Haigh for the GT Cup at the FIA Motorsport Games.[1] The event marked an early recognition of her abilities on a global stage, though details of their specific results haven’t surfaced in available records.
By 2023, Purcocks had moved into university karting, where she promptly claimed the British University Karting Championships Graduate Drivers’ title.[1] It was the kind of achievement that confirmed what Club 100 competitors already knew: she had the speed and the head to win when it mattered. University karting might not generate the headlines of international GT racing, but it’s a legitimate proving ground where genuinely talented drivers emerge from the noise of wealthy weekend warriors.
NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS
- 2019: Competed in FIA Motorsport Games GT Cup with Flick Haigh.[1]
- 2022: Represented Team UK in FIA Motorsport Games Karting Endurance with Jack O’Neill, Owen Jenman, and Mike Philippou; team finished outside medal positions.[3][6]
- 2023: British University Karting Championships Graduate Drivers’ champion.[1]
- 2024: JCS champion.[2]
- 2024: DMAX title winner, secured on the final round of the season.[2]
- 2024: Competed in Daytona Race of Champions Heat Five, starting from the front and leading early laps before being overtaken; finished with 108 points.[2]
- 2024: Bronze medal in FIA Motorsport Games Karting Endurance, competing for Team UK/Team Titan with brothers Jack O’Neill and Andy O’Neill.[1][5]
INSPIRATIONS
Purcocks hasn’t publicly discussed the drivers, mentors, or moments that shaped her racing ambitions. There are no documented interviews revealing childhood heroes or philosophical influences. It’s another blank space in the public record—one that leaves room for speculation but offers no actual answers. Perhaps the inspiration is simply the racing itself, which would be perfectly reasonable. Not everyone needs a dramatic origin story to justify why they love going fast.
REPUTATION
What reputation Purcocks has built comes entirely from her competitive record rather than paddock gossip or media profiles. Her selection for multiple Team UK squads at the FIA Motorsport Games—in 2019, 2022, and 2024—suggests that the people making those decisions recognized consistent ability worthy of international representation.[1][3][5][6] The 2024 FIA Motorsport Games appearance with Team Titan, resulting in a bronze medal in Karting Endurance, demonstrated she could deliver under pressure when wearing national colors.[1][5]
Her 2024 season showcased the kind of championship composure that separates contenders from also-rans. Taking the DMAX title on the final round requires nerve as much as speed, and her performance in the Daytona Race of Champions—starting at the front of Heat Five and leading early laps—proved she could handle the spotlight even when things didn’t go perfectly.[2] Finishing with 108 points after being overtaken isn’t the fairy-tale ending, but it’s the reality of racing, and she handled it.
The Club 100 community, known for tight racing and tighter competition, provided the foundation for her skills. Buckmore Park onboard footage from round one showed a driver comfortable managing traffic and finding speed in identical equipment—the ultimate equalizer.[4] In a series where mechanical advantages vanish and driver ability becomes the differentiator, Purcocks consistently proved she belonged.
FUTURE GOALS/PLANS
As of late 2024, following her bronze medal performance at the FIA Motorsport Games, Purcocks hasn’t publicly outlined what comes next. There are no announced team contracts for 2025, no stated ambitions about moving up the motorsport ladder, and no indication whether she’ll continue pursuing karting championships or attempt the leap into car racing that defines so many karting careers.
It’s the same opacity that characterizes most of her public presence: results without commentary, achievements without explanation. Whether this reflects genuine uncertainty about her racing future, financial constraints common in the sport, or simply a preference for letting actions speak louder than press releases remains unknown. What’s certain is that she’s demonstrated the talent to compete at national and international levels. What she does with that talent next is entirely up to her—and apparently, she’s not telling.
References:
Autosport – What to expect from Team UK at the FIA Motorsport Games
Daytona – Live Updates 2024 Daytona Race of Champions
Motorsport UK – Revolution Magazine November 2022
Scuderia Mayne Blog – Club 100 Race Reports
NGMW – Cumbrian Teenager Scores FIA Motorsport Games Gold for Team GB
Wikipedia – 2022 FIA Motorsport Games Karting Endurance Cup






