jimpastorius wrote:
Ford is deep peril.
Yep, Ford's in trouble. They were in trouble in 1927 and in 1985 too, but were saved by good new products (Model A, Taurus). Granted, this time it's worse, with Honda and Toyota gobbling up the center of the sedan market, high pension costs, and an overdependence on trucks.
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They are selling off piece meal, have no global platforms and nothing in the pipeline except the new F Series and more special edition Mustangs.
You forgot the new Taurus (not the 2008 chrome-engineered Five Hundred ... Lord, I'm sorry about that...) and the Ford Flex. The Flex looks like a cross between a Range Rover and a Mini, stretched to seat 9. Should be a neat alternative to large CUVs (or is it a CUV?) Anyway, Shultz has ordered one with woodgrain sides to tow the S2000

Oh, and the updated 2010 Mustang, with the 6.2 liter V8 option.
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The only home run they have had in the past 5 years was introducing Sync. And that was a coup, but the agreement expires in a few months and everyone will be offering it.
Sync - I never bothered to find out what that was... I don't like to think of my favorite car company getting into bed with my least favorite robber baron.. but I can take comfort in the knowledge that the styling of the 2008 Focus (Lord, I'm really sorry about that...) has got to have cost Bill tens of millions in royalties....
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Their motorsports program is non-existence and they have nothing that appeals to the enthusiast except the Shelby. Even their die-hard tuners are branching out to take on other makes. Who would have thought of Roush Silverados and other GM products?
The very existence of the "Life in D" ad campaign last year probably negates the promotional value all of Ford's past and future racing exploits, but I'd like to point out that a Ford powered car won the Rolex 24 at Daytona this year, and remind you that Ford Racing 500Cs fill the grids in Grand Am Cup. And there's Nascar, which is all most folks know about motorsports anyway. If you're talking about grass-roots motorsports programs -- they don't affect overall sales anyway, so why bother?
Anyway, at least Chuck is getting some mileage out his posting
