MOTOR

(Darren Dugan) #1
42 march 2015 motormag.com.au

parts, accessories and experiences for
customers,” is the message from the
horse’s mouth in Detroit.
For Aussie Ford fans, the
announcement seals the demise of the
FPV brand in Australia. In the One
Ford big picture, the main game is
global model ranges and the plan is
everything from the podium victories to
merchandising will output through the
same Ford Performance branding.
The message couldn’t be clearer.
Without a locally built car with which
to hang its providence on, there are
no reasons rational, commercial or
otherwise, for FPV branding to continue.
It won’t disappear altogether, however,
as Ford Australia will slowly phase the
brand out rather than kill it dead.
If Ford’s official line is taken as
gospel, the yet undisclosed dozen
“global” performance cars excludes
the GT, Shelby GT350/GT350R and
F-150 Raptor models. So far, the only
truly international nameplate release
confirmed under the Ford Performance
banner is the new-generation Focus RS,
due to lob later this year.


So what are the other 11 Ford
Performance models? And what hot
metal can Aussies expect to land in local
showrooms in the next six years between
now and end of the 2020?
Read between the lines, a ‘global’
model doesn’t necessarily have to be
one sold to all available markets. For
example, it seems illogical that Ford
would sink the considerable investment
required to green light its GT hypercar
and not make variations of the core
vehicle available in markets outside the
US if buyer demand dictated. Ditto for
F-150 Raptor.
Certainly some of the unnamed 11
models will be next-generation revamps
or facelifts of existing ranges, such as
Fiesta and Focus. Five years is a long
time in a model’s lifecycle and, as of
December last year, Ford pledged to
launch 20 new or refreshed models
across its range by 2020.
Expect the ST badge to proliferate
across Ford’s more affordable volume-
sellers. Ford sees ST branding as the
lynchpin to attracting younger buyers.
“In the US, more than 65 per cent of

ST customers come from outside the
Ford brand,” is the claim. “Millennials
are purchasing ST vehicles at a rate
twice that of other Ford-branded
vehicles.”
Indeed, it’s feasible both of Ford
Performance’s two established
enhancement grades – ST and RS –
will roll out across not just Fiesta and
Focus but also to Johnny-come-lately
‘new’ Mondeo that will debut in Oz
mid-year. You’d be brave to bet against
Ford marketing go-faster versions of the
Kuga small SUV – which already makes
178kW/345Nm in high-spec variants


  • or its EcoSport city car, particularly
    to Asian and European markets with a
    hunger for sports variants of compact
    urban vehicles.
    While the Detroit Show F-150 Raptor
    is unlikely to see Aussie terra-firma,
    a performance-enhanced and -styled
    version of the soon-to-be-facelifted
    Ranger in a market increasingly
    enamoured with imported utilities seems
    like a no-brainer.
    And Mustang? The emergence of the
    stove-hot, hardcore Shelby GT350/


THIS huge spoiler claws at the wind and
makes up part of the car’s aerodynamic
package. It’s complemented by that snow-
ploughing front splitter, matching side skirts
and rear underbody diffuser.

Sadly, chances of the GT350R
arriving in Oz are not great as
the engine isn’t designed for
right-hand drive, but expect a
hot Mustang to arrive before
too long

other 11 1 Ford
dels? Annd what hot
sexpecttolandinlocalttolandinlocal

ST customers come from outside the
Ford brand,” is the claim. “Millennials
arepurchasingSTvehiclesatarate

THIShuge spoiler claws at the wind and
makes up part of the car’s aerodynamic
package. It’s complemented by that snow-
ploughing front splitter, matching side skirts
and rear underbody diffuser.

Sadly, chances of the GT350R
arriving in Oz are not great as
the engine isn’t designed for
right-hand drive, but expect a
hot Mustang to arrive before
too long
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