Shelby GT350 Versus Mercury Cougar Eliminator
Die Cast X|Summer 2020
An uncommon pair of upscale Boss 302 muscle cars
Matt Boyd
Shelby GT350 Versus Mercury Cougar Eliminator
The performance credentials of the original pony car—the Ford Mustang— were greatly bolstered by the special GT350 models prepped by race tuner Carroll Shelby, but the arrival of Chevy’s competing Camaro in 1967—available with a big block—changed the focus of Mustang performance. Ford widened the ’67 Mustang to accommodate its own big block, but its lethargic 390 was no match for the Chevy, so Shelby took it upon himself to introduce a tuned-up 428 into the ’67 range. He christened the new car the GT500. The small-block powered GT350 faded to the background, and lost more luster still in 1968 when Ford discontinued its special 289 engine and replaced it with a regular production 302, which was down more than 50 horsepower. Shelby installed a 351 as a stopgap for 1969, but that was still a far cry from the raucous, rev-happy Shelbyspec 289 that gave the original GT350 both its character and its performance. There was, however, a new engine in the Mustang stable that became available later in 1969 with those characteristics and the potential to restore the soul of the original GT350: the Boss 302.

In anticipation of the 1970 Shelby models someone high up in Ford management put in a special production order for one of the last ’69 GT350s to be stuffed with a Boss 302 to serve as the pilot car for the next model year. Sadly, Carroll Shelby had become so disillusioned with Ford bureaucracy that he resigned at just about the time the car was being built. The remaining ’69 cars were retitled as 1970 models and sold off; and with that, the Shelby Mustangs were no more. The Acapulco Blue Boss Shelby pilot car is the only one of its kind, and a testament to what could have been.

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