Advertisement
Advertisement
Inside MX-5 Cup: Helio Meza is finding opportunities
By Richard S. James - Sep 26, 2025, 1:04 PM ET

Inside MX-5 Cup: Helio Meza is finding opportunities

Helio Meza kind of fell into the Mazda Motorsports ladder and Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup Presented by Michelin. But as it turns out, the series has boosted his skills like no other form of car racing he’s tried.

“I would say it’s probably the series that I’ve learned the most in cars. I mean, the field is super tight,” he says, adding that, because it’s a spec class, it allows a driver’s talent to shine and develop.

“You’re always going to be racing against someone in the pack. When I first started at the beginning of the year, I was kind of a mid-pack guy, but still racing against really great drivers. And then as you move forward and progress, you go up against guys who’ve been racing for a long time, like Jared Thomas, Tyler Gonzalez, Gresham Wagner… All these guys have a ton of experience, not only in this series, but they’ve raced a bunch of stuff over the years as well. I feel like you learn so much just being around them on the track.”

Meza wasn’t familiar with Mazda’s ladder or scholarship system until he was invited to the end-of-season Mazda Shootout after some success in karting. He won a Spec MX-5 Scholarship for the 2024 season and then returned for a second Mazda Shootout at that year’s end, netting the MX-5 Cup runner-up prize to race in the 2025 series.

“My family never really came from a lot of money, at least for the racing life, and so we were always picking up the scraps in karting – using old equipment, using tires out of the trash can to save money, to just make it as far as we could,” he recounts. “And when I got nominated for Spec MX-5, we were debating whether we should keep racing or not, or what the next step would be.”

Lack of money was one obstacle Meza had to overcome. Another was a hearing issue – Meza was born with bilateral microtia atresia, a condition in which the inner ear is absent or not fully developed – there's no connection from his outer ear to his eardrum.

“When I was three or four months old, with the help of doctors, I was able to get a bone conduction hearing aid, and kind of wore that on a headband. It wasn't until I was seven years old where I got surgery and got a bone anchored hearing aid implant, and that's how I'm able to hear today,” he explains.

There was just one problem – the external part of the hearing aid wouldn't fit when he was wearing a helmet. In karting, it was less of an issue – he could feel the vibrations. But moving into cars, there was no way for him to listen to a radio and have communication from the pits or a spotter.

“We reached out to many companies, and we were never really able to get help from anyone,” Meza says. “And so, my dad – I'm super grateful to have him – he came up with a bone-conduction system that we put inside of my racing helmet that has allowed me to hear my team and spotter whenever I'm in the car. It's been a winding road to get where I am today, to allow me to do what I love. But thanks to the doctors and my dad, I've been able to chase my dreams so far."

It’s worked out well thus far. Meza has placed himself in the thick of the Mazda MX-5 Cup Rookie of the Year fight leading into the finale weekend at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta. Through 12 of the 14 rounds, he has a best finish of second at Mid-Ohio and Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.

Meza’s No. 27 BSI Racing MX-5 Cup car carries the logo of Alessandros Racing on the hood, a Mexican outfit that is not only helping him out in MX-5 Cup, but also helped him race in Mexican Formula 4 in 2024, where he took a victory, and in the NASCAR Mexico Challenge Series this year, in which he’s won more than anybody else. He sees following MX-5 Cup alum Connor Zilisch into U.S. stock car racing as a possible future.

For now, however, he’s gunning for MX-5 Cup glory. He says that while the Rookie of the Year is certainly a goal, he doesn’t focus on it. Instead, he goes after it with a different plan.

“The past two years, I’ve been working a lot on the mental side of racing,” Meza explains. “The way I look at anything I do, and especially racing, is that I try not to put any expectations on myself, because I feel like that leads to mistakes and unnecessary pressure. So, I’ve always had the approach of just going into things and just giving it my all.”

If he gives it his all for one more weekend when the MX-5 Cup has its finale at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta next month, he could walk away with the Rookie of the Year title. And he will have made himself another opportunity.

All Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup Presented by Michelin races are streamed live on RACER.com and archived on The RACER Channel on YouTube. Next up it’s the 2025 season finale, with double-header action from rounds 13 & 14 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, Ga., on Thursday, Oct. 9, and Friday, Oct. 10. Plus, find all the latest series news at mx-5cup.com

Richard S. James
Richard S. James

Richard James is motorsports journalist living in Orange County, Calif, who has been involved in the sport to some degree for three decades. He covers primarily sports car racing as a writer and photographer, with occasional forays into off-road and other forms of racing. A former editor of the SCCA’s publication, SportsCar, he has a special love for the grass-roots side of the sport and participates as a driver in amateur road racing.

Read Richard S. James's articles

Comments

Comments are disabled until you accept Social Networking Cookies. Update cookie preferences

If the dialog doesn't appear, ad-blockers are often the cause; try disabling yours or see our Social Features Support.