Ford
- Ford’s Performance Racing School is free to anybody who buys a Ford Performance vehicle.
- It’s a one-day course, taught by experienced drivers and instructors, who show you what your car can do.
- All you have to do is get yourself to Utah.
- I’ve driven plenty of tracks, but I had a lot learn in the Shelby GT350 Mustang I was assigned.
Ford sells several thrill-inducing vehicles through its Ford Performance division. Anyone who buys one can take advantage of perhaps the greatest perk in the car world: a full-day of driving instruction at Ford’s Performance Racing School.
The program is free to all new owners of Shelby GT350s and 350R Mustangs, Focus RS and STs, Raptor pickups, and Fiesta STs. (And something is under construction for the $ 400,000 Ford GT supercar, which started deliveries to the first of 250 customers in 2017.)
All that’s required is that your get yourself to the Salt Lake City, Utah area and make your way to Utah Motorsports, where track-ready versions of your car will be waiting for you, along with a group of experienced instructors with serious racing credentials.
It’s called Track Attack. I was put through the course, alongside a group of newly minted Shelby GT350 owners. We spent a full day learning how to be better drivers before we took it the track and put some ‘Stangs through their paces.
I’m under no illusions that I’m a good track driver, but I do have some track experience. Little did I know how much more I had to learn.
The Racing School and the Track Attack program are based at the Utah Motorsports Campus, a complex of two tracks complete with paddocks, pits, race-control towers, and even a karting course. The facility is about a half hour drive from Salt Lake City.
Matthew DeBord/BI
Welcome to the fun! I was preparing to participate in a drive of the Ford GT supercar and welcomed the chance to get some instruction before taking on the $ 400,000 Le Mans-winning beast and its 647-horsepower engine.
Matthew DeBord/BI
Any Ford customer who buys a Ford Performance vehicle is offered the chance to attend a one-day racing program for free. All they have to do is get to the venue.
Matthew DeBord/BI
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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