by Steve Holmes » Tue Mar 11, 2014 2:57 am
This is Australian born Horst Kwech in one of the Shelby factory Mustangs. Shelby had won the Trans-Am in 1967, but struggled in 1968, with the ill-fated tunnel-port motor. For 1969, Ford entered two Mustang teams, for Shelby and Bud Moore. Bud Moore had come from Nascar, and he really did his homework. He ran the factory Mercury Cougars in the 1967 Trans-Am, and almost won the series.
Ford decided it didn't want two brands competing against each other in the one series, so Moore helped convince Nascar to create a Trans-Am rival, run mostly on oval tracks, which they called Nascar Grand Touring. The first year of Nascar GT was 1968, and Moore ran a team of factory Cougars in it. Incidentally, Nascar Grand Touring evolved into Nascar Grand American, and eventually, Nascar Nationwide, which continues today as the second-tier class to the Sprint Cup.
Anyway, Ford brought back Bud Moore to the Trans-Am in 1969, for a two-pronged effort to trounce Chevrolet. They failed, but not because the magnificent Kar-Kraft built Mustangs weren't fast enough, but because the Fords actually tripped over themselves way too often. Parnelli Jones was invariably the fastest Mustang driver of the four cars entered at each round, but he also got hot under the collar.
Of the two factory Ford teams, Bud Moore was invariably faster than Shelby, and when Ford decided to make drastic cut-backs to its racing programs for 1970, they dropped Shelby in favour of Bud Moore. At that, Shelby shut-up shop, and quit the racing game.
This is Australian born Horst Kwech in one of the Shelby factory Mustangs. Shelby had won the Trans-Am in 1967, but struggled in 1968, with the ill-fated tunnel-port motor. For 1969, Ford entered two Mustang teams, for Shelby and Bud Moore. Bud Moore had come from Nascar, and he really did his homework. He ran the factory Mercury Cougars in the 1967 Trans-Am, and almost won the series.
Ford decided it didn't want two brands competing against each other in the one series, so Moore helped convince Nascar to create a Trans-Am rival, run mostly on oval tracks, which they called Nascar Grand Touring. The first year of Nascar GT was 1968, and Moore ran a team of factory Cougars in it. Incidentally, Nascar Grand Touring evolved into Nascar Grand American, and eventually, Nascar Nationwide, which continues today as the second-tier class to the Sprint Cup.
Anyway, Ford brought back Bud Moore to the Trans-Am in 1969, for a two-pronged effort to trounce Chevrolet. They failed, but not because the magnificent Kar-Kraft built Mustangs weren't fast enough, but because the Fords actually tripped over themselves way too often. Parnelli Jones was invariably the fastest Mustang driver of the four cars entered at each round, but he also got hot under the collar.
Of the two factory Ford teams, Bud Moore was invariably faster than Shelby, and when Ford decided to make drastic cut-backs to its racing programs for 1970, they dropped Shelby in favour of Bud Moore. At that, Shelby shut-up shop, and quit the racing game.
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