Touring car racing -built Sierra RS500 touring car. In August 1987 the Sierra RS500 Cosworth was homologated. Ford took pole position in all the remaining six
1987 World Touring Car Championship events and was first over the finish line in four of them. The works
Eggenberger Motorsport team won the entrants' World Championship, although the team's cars were disqualified from the
1987 Bathurst 1000 in Australia for wheel arch panel irregularities. These had been deemed legal in every other race that year however this deprived
Klaus Ludwig and
Klaus Niedzwiedz of the drivers' title. Eggenberger won the 1989
Spa 24 Hours.
Robb Gravett won the
1990 British Touring Car Championship in a RS500. The BTCC points system was such that divisions below the Sierra (3500cc & under, 2000cc & under) would gain more points for a class win therefore although the Sierra finished first in 9/12 rounds of the 1987 season and first in every race from 1988 to 1990 it only took the drivers title once in 1990. The RS500 was successful in the
1988 DTM with Klaus Ludwig in the Ford Team Grab winning the drivers championship and Wolf Racing winning the Team Championship. Both Grab and Wolf were Ford Works Teams and beat
Mercedes-AMG along with
BMW M Sport for the honours. For the 1989 season, the cars were reined in with even higher weight and boost penalties (partly due to protests from BMW and Mercedes who felt they were at a significant disadvantage) until they were no longer competitive, subsequently forced induction engines were banned for 1991 season onwards. Knowing they were unable to be competitive, Ford left the DTM at end of the 1989 season. The RS500 was successful in Australian touring car racing with
Dick Johnson Racing dominating the
1988 and
1989 Australian Touring Car Championships, with
Dick Johnson and
John Bowe finishing one-two in both years. Early in 1988, the Johnson team also took the step of homologating a modified
Ford nine-inch axle for the Sierra, eliminating the car's drivetrain weakness and allowing the cars to be driven harder with less fear of failure. This was also seen as essential in Australia which used standing starts compared to the rolling starts used in Europe.
Glenn Seton won the
1990 Australian Endurance Championship driving a Sierra RS500. The RS500 won the
Bathurst 1000 twice; in
1988 with
Tony Longhurst and
Tomas Mezera and in
1989 with Johnson and Bowe. It also won the
1988 Sandown 500 with
Allan Moffat and
Gregg Hansford and the
1990 Sandown 500 with
Glenn Seton and
George Fury.
Robbie Francevic won the
New Zealand Touring Car Championship in 1989 and 1990 for
Mark Petch Motorsport. The RS500 also won 3 out 4 rounds of the
1988 Asia-Pacific Touring Car Championship, however due to Division 2 vehicles (2000cc-3500cc) gaining more points for outright places, it did not take the title with
Colin Bond taking second place. The RS500 won the
Japanese Touring Car Championship in 1987, 1988 & 1989 with team Object T. Ballast. Boost restrictions were increased for the 1989 season, resulting in hampered performance. With only two wins, it did not win the drivers title but did retain the manufacturers title.
Major wins Major series and race wins by the Ford Sierra RS500 include:
Series wins •
World Touring Car Championship -
1987 (entrants' title) •
European Touring Car Championship -
1988 (entrants' title) •
Australian Touring Car Championship -
1988,
1989 •
Deutsche Tourenwagen Meisterschaft - 1988 •
Japanese Touring Car Championship - 1987, 1988, (1989 entrants' title) •
AMSCAR series - 1988, 1989, 1990 • Nissan Mobil 500 Series - 1989, 1990 •
New Zealand Touring Car Championship - 1989, 1990, 1992 •
British Touring Car Championship -
1990 •
Australian Endurance Championship -
1990 Race wins •
Wellington 500 -
1987 •
Fuji InterTEC 500 -
1987, 1988, 1989 •
Nürburgring 24 Hours - 1987 •
RAC Tourist Trophy - 1988 •
Sandown 500 -
1988,
1990 •
Bathurst 1000 -
1988,
1989 •
Pukekohe 500 - 1988, 1989, 1990 •
Spa 24 Hours - 1989 •
Guia Race of Macau - 1989 The RS500 can be seen as the catalyst for the downfall of the Group A format due to its dominance in every Group A sanctioned event from 1987 onwards. With the
Ford Sierra due to be replaced with the all new
Ford Mondeo for the 1993 model year, the
BTCC,
DTM and other championships moving away from the
Group A format from 1990 onwards due to increasing costs, lack of manufacturer participation and the RS500 still winning over 3 years after it had been homologated, Ford saw no reason to produce another 'Evolution' model. Motorsport Magazine stated the RS500 is statistically the most successful road derived racing car of all time, winning 84.6% of all races it entered.
Rallying in the 1988
Rally de Portugal The Sierra Cosworth was also pressed into service as a rally car, and saw some success. After the abolition of the
Group B formula in the
World Rally Championship at the end of 1986, manufacturers had to turn to Group A cars and Ford, like most others, found itself without a fully suitable car. The Cosworth was very powerful but, with only rear-wheel-drive, lost out to the four-wheel-drive Lancias and Mazdas on loose-surface events, while the four-wheel-drive XR4x4 had an excellent chassis but an elderly engine producing only around 230 bhp, at least 80 less than the Lancia. For the 1987 season the team ran both, using the XR4x4 on loose surfaces and the Cosworth on tarmac, but the XR4x4's power disadvantage was too great and from 1988 the team concentrated on the Cosworth alone, and continued to use it until the arrival of the Sierra RS Cosworth 4x4 in 1990. The rear-drive car never won a loose-surface World Rally Championship event, but in the hands of drivers such as
Stig Blomqvist,
Carlos Sainz and
Ari Vatanen it frequently finished in the top five, except when conditions were particularly slippery. On tarmac it was a much more serious competitor, and a young
Didier Auriol won the 1988 Corsica Rally outright, the only time that season that Lancia were beaten in a straight fight. However, as Lancia developed the Delta Integrale further and new cars such as the Toyota Celica GT-Four ST165 appeared, the Cosworth became steadily less competitive. Thanks to strong support and readily available parts from Ford Racing, the Cosworth was a popular car with private teams. Moreover, below world championship level, four-wheel-drive opposition was limited at the time, and the Cosworth was as fast as any of its two-wheel-drive rivals. It lacked the fine handling of the BMW M3, for example, but on the other hand it was much more powerful. It was also very reliable. Consequently, it became a very popular car at the national championship level, and during the late 1980s Sierra drivers won many national series. For example,
Jimmy McRae took the
British Rally Championship in a Sierra in 1987 and 1988, whilst
Carlos Sainz won the
Spanish Rally Championship, and
Didier Auriol won the
French Rally Championship in those same years. The Cosworth was popular with spectators because it was visually dramatic, with its flame-spitting exhaust and tail-sliding, rear-drive handling; and it was popular with amateur drivers because it was competitive, robust and relatively cheap. To this day it is a fairly common sight at lower-level events.
WRC Victories : == Sierra Sapphire RS Cosworth (RWD) ==