The Thunderbird? In the 50's thru the 70's, one of the big mis-matches of all time was the European idea of a sportscar vs the USA-ien concept of it (also vs the Italian vs the French). I think primarily it had to do with the local racing forms. A sports car was supposed to be the street version of whatever is actually racing. Comparably speaking, US: Power and top speed, Euro: Handling, Grip and Nimbleness.(with exceptions)
In Italy they made them race ready (luxury added), but only raced a cleaver clone. (more humor here than fact) And the French? Sooo much persona over function it's hard to separate fact from fiction. In many ways the German and English stayed more concise to ideals.(IMHO)
But then over time, quite often, the sportscar became just the persona of racing imagery. Possibly the best example of that, IMHO, the Camero.
I don't think that movie qualifies as a real race. You know THAT movie, smokey!
There is very little in the consumer product that matches any racing counterpart. OK, OK some of the drivetrain, and of course the shell.
So I say, if you only require persona, the Thunderbird is a sportscar. If that must have a racers pedigree, then probably not.
However it does belong to a category very native to N.American culture (inclusive!: Canada & Mexico) which Sportscars automatically belong to, the Cruiser. I don't think there is a more iconic persona than Saturday night cruising around in a 70's convertible Thunderbird! Pink? All the better.
In Italy they made them race ready (luxury added), but only raced a cleaver clone. (more humor here than fact) And the French? Sooo much persona over function it's hard to separate fact from fiction. In many ways the German and English stayed more concise to ideals.(IMHO)
But then over time, quite often, the sportscar became just the persona of racing imagery. Possibly the best example of that, IMHO, the Camero.
I don't think that movie qualifies as a real race. You know THAT movie, smokey!
There is very little in the consumer product that matches any racing counterpart. OK, OK some of the drivetrain, and of course the shell.
So I say, if you only require persona, the Thunderbird is a sportscar. If that must have a racers pedigree, then probably not.
However it does belong to a category very native to N.American culture (inclusive!: Canada & Mexico) which Sportscars automatically belong to, the Cruiser. I don't think there is a more iconic persona than Saturday night cruising around in a 70's convertible Thunderbird! Pink? All the better.