Words
and photos by Ian Tocher
6/8/05
It’s not often a man’s first love stands the
test of time, but upon taking delivery in 1964 of the first
Mustang ever sold in Savannah, GA, Jerry Bridgforth began
a long affair with Ford’s pony car that shows no
signs of waning.
“I graduated high school that year and my mom and
dad ordered one before they even came out,” he says. "Naturally,
I had to modify it and in 1965 they had a Mustang race
in Savannah and had 27 cars there and I won that race.
That was the start of my drag racing career.”
Now 58, Bridgforth is fresh off making his career-first
200-mph pass during an NHRA licensing run in his “new” 1966
Mustang G.T. 350H Pro Mod. After making several eighth-mile
attempts, he covered the quarter mile at South Georgia
Motorsports Park in 6.668 seconds at 200.86 mph. “I
didn't even know it until I looked at the computer, and
it could’ve been even faster because I let off at
about a thousand feet.”
Despite being new to the track, Bridgforth’s one-of-a-kind
ride has a lengthy history that includes several U.S. states,
a couple of world champions, and a few of the best-known
personalities in Pro Mod and Pro Stock racing.
Originally created up in Hawk Point, MO, by noted chassis
builder Tim McAmis as a Pro Mod blower car for Harry Raynor
in 1997, Bridgforth says he saw the slick ‘66 make
its debut at Bradenton, FL. “Harry told me to sit
in it and I fell in love with it right then.” The
striking black ‘Stang saw only three outings, though,
before insurance issues prompted Raynor to park it and
give up Pro Mod racing.
A couple of years later, IHRA Pro Stock star Robert Patrick
found out about the car and purchased it from Raynor to
run in a new class to be called Outlaw Pro Stock. Patrick
immediately sent it to Jerry Bickel in Moscow Mills, MO,
where it spent several months being re-engineered to accept
a naturally aspirated powerplant. The Outlaw Pro Stock
series never caught on, however, and again the Mustang
was put out to pasture until Patrick traded it in 2003
to former IHRA Pro Stock champion (1996, 2000) Jon Yoak.