Dallas Formula Racing Student Wins
Mazda Scholarship

Vinnie Meskelis, a mechanical engineering freshman and a member of the Dallas Formula Racing team at UT Dallas, was one of three winners at the Mazda Motorsports 2024 Spec MX-5 Shootout. He received a $50,000 scholarship, professional coaching and support to participate on the Mazda Factory Club Racing Team.

“I said, ‘I’m going to buy my first go-kart, and I just need you guys to help with other expenses like entry fees, fuel, tires, travel and whatever,’” Meskelis said. “Once we got home, their response was jokingly, ‘OK, go to your room.’”

Meskelis’ dad then agreed to take him to the racetrack. Meskelis used his lawn-mowing money to buy a used go-kart and began racing several days a week.

“I was able to pick it up very quickly and get better by just training, training, training,” Meskelis said. He developed his physical fitness, the ability to focus for long stretches at the wheel, data analysis skills to evaluate his performance and an understanding of the go-kart’s mechanics.

Meskelis soon began to win top prizes in local, regional and, eventually, national competitions. He learned to become his own mechanic while competing at the national level, and he beat teams with larger budgets and more resources. Once classes resumed after the initial stages of the pandemic, he continued his high school studies online to accommodate his racing schedule.

In 2024, Meskelis moved from racing go-karts to cars, and in November, he won the Mazda Motorsports scholarship at the 2024 Spec MX-5 Shootout. He was one of three scholarship winners at the event for aspiring racers at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

As part of his scholarship, Meskelis receives professional coaching and support to participate on the Mazda Factory Club Racing Team, a program that develops aspiring racers in the grassroots MX-5 class who drive third-generation MX-5 Miatas.

So far this year, Meskelis has won a spot on the podium in nine races, including five first-place finishes, and he set two track records. Last year, he placed in the top three in 10 races, winning seven of them, including the ChampCar Endurance Series 24-hour race at Virginia International Raceway, where he spent six hours in the car over three two-hour stints and set one track record.

He will compete in the Sports Car Club of America National Championship Runoffs at Road America in September for a chance to move up to the Mazda Motorsports’ MX-5 Cup, which offers more than $1 million in prize money and scholarships a year.

At UT Dallas, Meskelis takes classes and finishes his homework early in the week so he can fly to competitions on weekends. This year his racing schedule includes competitions on 20 weekends, including five as part of the Mazda program. Meskelis also serves as testing lead for Dallas Formula Racing, a UTD student-run organization that builds and races small, Formula-style vehicles.

These days, as Meskelis works toward his professional goals, his parents, Simone and Wladimir Meskelis, are cheering him on.

“Now, they are my No. 1 supporters and are doing everything in their power to help me achieve my dream,” he said.