1983 The cars were not ready until the 15th round of the IMSA GT Championship, which was the
Road America 500, where two cars were entered by
Zakspeed Roush; the 2.1-litre engines were not ready yet, so the team ran the 1.7-litre version of the BDA turbo instead.
Tim Coconis and
Klaus Ludwig drove one car, while
Bobby Rahal and
Geoff Brabham drove the other. The
Grand Prix of Pocono, however, would turn out to be very different, as Ludwig's car lasted just eight laps before retiring, and the Brabham-Ludwig car retired after 49 laps; this saw them classified 42nd and 35th overall, and eighth and tenth in class, respectively. The cracks in the program had already begun to show; Roush, annoyed that Ford had blocked their efforts to run a
V8 engine in the car, pulled out of the project. Rahal, who had earlier raced for
Holbert Racing, was classified in 14th in the GTP driver's championship, with 47 points; Ludwig was classified in 21st, while Coconis was level with
David Hobbs in 31st, and Brabham was 38th.
1984 Despite the car's problems in the latter two races, Zakspeed and Ford continued with the Mustang GTP program in 1984; the 2.1-litre engine was finally ready, and was used throughout the season. Ludwig was selected to drive the solitary entry at the
Grand Prix of Miami, which was the second round of the IMSA GT Championship; a puncture damaged the front left suspension on his car, and forced him to retire after 31 laps, resulting in Ludwig being classified 25th. The team skipped the
12 Hours of Sebring, and next entered Ludwig and Rahal at the
Grand Prix of Atlanta; this time, the fuel injection system packed up after 47 laps, restricting them to 48th overall, and 18th in the GTP category. The
Los Angeles Times Grand Prix was little better; Rahal and Ludwig completed 74 laps before a valve in the engine broke, and forced them out of the race, resulting in a classification of 40th overall, and 20th in the GTP category. Two cars were entered at the
Monterey Triple Crown; Ludwig drove one, while
Bob Wollek drove the other. However, Ludwig retired on lap 45, and Wollek lasted an extra lap. Neither car ran in the next two rounds, and only Ludwig competed in the
6 Hours of Watkins Glen; this time, a
crankshaft failure after 17 laps saw him finish 51st overall, and 18th in the GTP category. The
Portland Grand Prix saw Ludwig's Mustang GTP last 24 laps, before he retired, and was classified 29th overall, and 18th in class. At the
Grand Prix of Sonoma, Ludwig (with sponsorship from
7-Eleven) was finally able to finish a race with the Mustang GTP; he took fifth, and was the last car on the lead lap. Rahal partnered with Ludwig at the Road America 500, but the team's 1983 victory would not be repeated; a retirement after 83 laps saw them classified 33rd overall, and 16th in the GTP category. Having skipped the fourteenth round of the season, Zakspeed then entered the
Michigan Grand Prix with two cars; Rahal did not even complete the first lap, and Ludwig retired after 54 laps, resulting in the drivers being classified 33rd and 24th overall, 22nd and 16th in the GTP category. Zakspeed did not compete in the 16th round of the season, but did enter the Daytona Finale. Here, Brabham's engine blew after 15 laps, restricting him to 69th overall (and 30th in class), but Ludwig and
Tom Gloy's Mustang GTP held together well enough for them to finish fifth overall, and in class. Ludwig finished the season in 43rd place, with 16 points; Gloy was the only other Zakspeed driver to be classified, and his eight points were enough for joint-60th, level with
Michael Brockman,
Boy Hayje and
Hans-Joachim Stuck. Disillusioned with the car's unreliability, Ford pulled out of the project, with
Michael Kranefuss going so far as to say that "it was the worst project I've ever been involved in." Even if the Mustang GTP had been reliable, the car had questionable aerodynamics, and it was very hard to drive when the fuel loads were low. Zakspeed would replace the car with the
Ford Mustang Probe for 1985, while Roush would eventually resurface in 1987, with the
Ford Mustang Maxum GTP. ==References==