The finished car was dispatched to Holman and Moody, who were charged with running it in the Can-Am series. It soon picked up the moniker Honker II, apparently in tribute to John Holman, who enjoyed tooting the air horns of the team transporters. For reasons unknown it was painted a shade of what was variously described as lavender or pink. The livery and name gave the thing an unfortunate pig-like image that was to prove remarkably apt…
The Can-Am schedule did not start until September, three months after Ford’s second Le Mans win, but the car was barely ready for the first outing at Elkhart Lake. On arrival on Saturday the Holman and Moody truck felled a telephone pole, which didn’t bode well, and the car itself was basically not ready to race. Mario hadn’t even sat in it
“Everything was bad about it,” he recalls. “It was pink, and it was ugly. That car was scary in a straight line. It had lift, actually! I was at a loss with it. It was done so wrong, and the aero package was non-existent. It had a clumsy gearbox, and was just ill-conceived all round. I was the guinea pig on that one.”
Among the things Mario couldn’t understand was why the gear-lever was in a central position, requiring an unnecessarily complex linkage behind the seat.
“It kept getting the wrong gear, so I had to do some thinking as far as my shifting pattern was concerned. I remember going into a corner and shifting from fourth to third. The thing slipped over and picked up second. They told me I had to be careful about my slot! Then they realised what was happening, and finally put the lever where it belonged. It was one nightmare after another.”