Young Barbadian track cycling prospect Arielle Greaves has delivered a career-defining performance at the Pan American Junior Track Cycling Championships held in Mexico, shattering her own previous national junior record in the women’s flying 200 meters to earn high praise from the head of the Barbados Cycling Union (BCU).
Competing on Wednesday, Greaves crossed the finish line with a blistering time of 11.319 seconds, beating the 11.800-second record she set last year at a competition in Peru by a significant margin. The outstanding result comes against a challenging backdrop for the rising star: Barbados currently has no operational velodrome for domestic training, forcing Greaves to relocate to Trinidad for consistent access to proper training facilities. This requires the teen athlete to make extraordinary personal sacrifices to advance her cycling career, a reality that makes her new record even more impressive, BCU president Omar Beckles emphasized in an interview with local outlet Barbados TODAY.
Speaking on behalf of the BCU executive board, Beckles expressed immense pride in Greaves’ achievement. “If anyone’s been following her steady progress, they know how much commitment it takes for an athlete her age to relocate to another country just to get the training she needs,” Beckles said. “We are absolutely delighted to see her hard work, discipline and sacrifice pay off with this historic result. What she has accomplished already is tremendous.”
Beckles noted that Greaves has now reached a competitive milestone that demands long-term strategic planning to nurture her talent. At the Pan American championships, she competed against the top junior riders from major cycling nations across the region, including Mexico and Colombia – the strongest field young riders can face outside of European junior competition. This result confirms she can hold her own against the best junior talent in the Americas, Beckles said, but added that there is still work to do to close the gap with the world’s elite. Greaves finished behind a Colombian rider who took gold in the event, and Beckles pointed out that this performance demonstrates even without access to home infrastructure, Greaves’ natural talent is undeniable. The next step will be creating opportunities for her to compete consistently against top global riders to continue refining her skills.
Greaves’ breakthrough is part of a growing legacy of elite female cycling talent emerging from Barbados, following in the footsteps of senior rider Amber Joseph, who has represented the country with distinction at the international level for multiple years. Beckles noted that Joseph continues to deliver strong results at the senior level, and Greaves’ early success at a younger age points to even more room for growth as she develops.
The lack of a domestic velodrome in Barbados stems from an ongoing infrastructure upgrade project: the old Randolph Field Velodrome at the former National Stadium site was demolished to clear space for a new, modern facility planned for Bushy Park. As of the latest update, no firm construction timeline has been confirmed, though Sports Minister Griffith has publicly outlined the government’s plans for the new venue. Beckles said the BCU understands that large infrastructure projects require time, and while the cycling community is eager for the new facility to open, the union is working closely with government stakeholders to move the project forward. He added that the government has remained committed to supporting Barbadian cyclists in the interim, ensuring athletes do not face disadvantages due to the lack of domestic training infrastructure.
