
By the late 1960s, Ford seemed to be concentrating more on holding grudges than building cars. Still smarting from its failure to acquire Ferrari, Ford grabbed a weak consolation prize when it acquired the DeTomaso organization, along with past-their-prime coachbuilders Ghia and Vignale.
At the time of its acquisition by Ford, Alejandro DeTomaso’s concern had yet to build a professionally executed, successful sports car. The 4-cylinder Vallelunga was largely stillborn, and the gorgeous Mangusta made a Lamborghini Miura look like a reasonable daily driver.
The Pantera was to be different—Ford’s own Ferrari sold through Lincoln-Mercury dealers. The same Lincoln-Mercury dealers, who at the time had a sizable percentage of their customer base born in the 19th century, were charged with selling a two-seat Italian sports car with a $10,000 price tag. Not an insubstantial sum in 1971, it would buy a new Porsche Cayman today.
More conventional...
![]() |
DeTomaso Pantera $19.95 |
![]() |
Keith Martin's Buyer's Guide: DeTomaso Pantera 1971-74 $8.95 |
![]() |
Pantera -Ultimate Portfolio $37.95 |