Currently reading: Shelby American looks to do more UK business
We talk to Gary Patterson, president of Shelby American, Inc, about his plans for the company

Gary Patterson, president of Shelby American Inc, speaks to Autocar about UK plans, mixing old with new and what lies ahead for the performance-led Ford tuner.

What are your plans for the UK market?

“We’re looking to do a lot more business in the UK. It’s clearly a market that has some real excitement for Shelby: it has embraced the Mustang Bullitt, which shows that the market for speciality V8 Ford Mustangs there is very strong. Everybody wants a V8 if you are getting a muscle car from America. We love V8s and we love boost: for 2019 the Shelby Super Snake has more than 800bhp and is emissions legal on pump fuel. We also think that the new Shelby GT, with 480bhp and Ford Performance-tailored suspension, has great potential as a muscle car that can be driven every day.”

Bullitt

How would you characterise a modern Shelby vehicle?

“I would say it’s about balanced performance – a good blend of straight-line [performance], handling and braking. Since the 2007 Super Snake, we’ve created a look and feel for all the vehicles through the signature front fascia, bonnet, wheels and stripe. When you see one from 50 yards away, you know it’s a Shelby. There are a lot of people out there doing things to Mustangs – Roush, Saleen and others – but we want to make sure that we’re not just stickers and scoops, that we have a lot of content in our cars.”

Shelby 2

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How do you balance tradition with appealing to younger buyers?

“I still have the first car I bought, a ’69 Mustang Mach 1 with a Big Block [V8]. But that’s not what my kids want. The important thing is to educate people about Shelby – to tell the story and have them embrace it, both the old and the new. Ten years ago, our customers often already had a vintage Shelby when they bought a new car to go with the old one. But as time has progressed, a younger generation is starting with the new one. Then they find out about the Shelby story, feel the tradition and buy the older car as well. It’s flipped around.”

How does Carroll Shelby’s legacy still influence what you do?

“I worked with him for 16 years, so I got a good feel for how his mind worked. His thought process was not to be satisfied with what you’re doing today. He was always about looking forward. That’s great, and this company had better think that way, otherwise we’re going to be out of business. When asked, Carroll’s favourite car was always the next one, which is the right answer, else you’re forever living in the past.”

Shelby

What does the future hold for Shelby?

“Carroll used to say, ‘I’m Carroll Shelby and performance is my business.’ Smart man – he said performance, not cars. He started producing performance pickups before anybody else, in 1989 with the Dodge Dakota. He had that vision and 75-80% of what we do today in the US is trucks, because that’s what the customer wants. We’ve no plans to do an SUV or an electric Shelby at the moment, but you never know, it could all change. Performance will always be our business – how that’s defined in the future, who knows? We’ll see where things go. We’ll listen to people, find out what they want, and that’s what we’ll build.”

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jagdavey 4 January 2019

After Brexit...........

After an hard brexit, UK adopting WTO rules, tariffs on American imported cars will fall to 5%!!

Shelby could be out selling "M" models & AMG. We'll all be buying American because we won't be able to afford German anymore.

xxxx 4 January 2019

EU Tariff

What's stopping American built cars coming over, a 20% tariff.  Until this is removed cars like the Model 3 will always struggle, unfortunatly the German car industry will never allow it bacause they don't want to see a repeat of what Tesla has done to BMW Series 3/4 etc in the US  

FMS 7 January 2019

xxxx wrote:

xxxx wrote:

What's stopping American built cars coming over, a 20% tariff.  Until this is removed cars like the Model 3 will always struggle, unfortunatly the German car industry will never allow it bacause they don't want to see a repeat of what Tesla has done to BMW Series 3/4 etc in the US  

 

As per usual, ad nauseum, you do NOT do any background checks. NOTHING is stopping American built cars coming over...simply demand is limited and can be satisfied by either personal import or paying a firm to do this. You have a command of language that would be a FAIL in middle primary school..."bacause"?...lack of correct grammar, virtually no punctuation, lack of coherent thought and no writing skill. You are a WINNER!!!. TwIT, the w is silent, as you should be.