driving for Ford Mondeo Racing in the
1998 British Touring Car Championship for
Ford Team Mondeo in the
2000 British Touring Car Championship The Mondeo competed in the
British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) between 1993 and 2000. The cars, prepared by former series champion
Andy Rouse, did not enter the
1993 season until the eighth round, at
Pembrey, in Wales. Rouse and
Paul Radisich were the drivers in the Mondeo's first season. Radisich went on to win the
FIA World Touring Car Cup in both 1993 and 1994 driving a Mondeo. Ford ran a factory-sponsored team, called Ford Team Mondeo, for eight seasons.
Andy Rouse Engineering ran the cars from 1993 to 1995, when
West Surrey Racing ran the works team from 1996 to 1998, with
Prodrive taking over beginning 1999. In 2000, the team expanded from two cars to three when drivers
Alain Menu and
Anthony Reid were joined by 1998 series champion
Rickard Rydell, recruited from the disbanded
Volvo team. The team dominated the season of
2000, finishing 1–2–3 (Menu–Reid–Rydell) in the drivers' standings and winning the manufacturers' championship by 104 points. A complete overhaul of the BTCC following the season of 2000 had the
Super Touring regulations scrapped as the series moved towards less expensive, but slower race cars. Ford withdrew from BTCC competition prior to 2001. The touring cars, after their withdrawal, went on sale to the public and are now in the hands of other drivers. Two of the 2000 series Mondeos have been spotted in the BRSCC series of LMA Euro saloons; drivers known to own them at present are Bernard Hogarth and Alvin Powell. The Mk I and Mk II Mondeo have followed many other previous Ford models into the world of
banger racing in the United Kingdom, and with plenty of older cars being available for very little money, the Mondeo is now a popular and relatively easy car to race. The Zetec engines are converted to run off a carb set up and the Mondeo bodyshell is fairly tough, but they are proving rather rigid, with many drivers getting injured in high-speed impacts. Mondeos are proving more popular than the Sierra and Mk III Granada. In Argentina, the Mondeo is one of several cars to compete in the local
Top Race racing category; its body is handcrafted in reinforced fiberglass. The Mondeo is so far the most successful car in the category, with three championship titles in the TRV6 class and two championship titles in the Top Race series (formerly Top Race Junior). The winning drivers in the TRV6 class were Omar Martínez (2006), José María López (2009), and Guido Falaschi (Copa América 2010) with the Mondeo II (based on the MkIII Mondeo), and in the TR Junior category, the championship was won by Gonzalo Perlo in 2008 and Humberto Krujoski in 2010. In 2009, the Mondeo III (based on the MkIV Mondeo) bodystyle was approved and presented as an option within the category; however, the Mondeo II bodywork is still being used. Similarly, in the United States, the Fusion/Mondeo Mk 5 bodywork began use for the sixth-generation body in the
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starting in 2013, replacing the current
Mazda6-based Fusion. == Awards ==