BBC Top Gear Magazine

Ford Focus ST

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REPORT 5

£ 29,495 OTR/£32,440 as tested/£377pcm

WHY IT’ S HERE

Is the Fiesta ST’s bigger brother just as magical as a daily?

DRI V ER

Ollie Kew

THE EAGLE-EYED AMONG YOU WILL HAVE SPOTTED THAT THE TG

Garage’s Focus ST, EW19 OJN, is the very same example that starred at our TG24 extravagan­za in Portugal last summer. It wilted. As Portimão sizzled in a 40-degree scorcher, the poor Focus didn’t half feel out of sorts. Its Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tyres – pretty much the go-to everyday performanc­e car rubber right now – overheated within a lap, before distributi­ng chunks of their sidewalls on every missed apex afterwards. The brakes went long and squidgy, and the car seemed to heave about and huff and puff under duress, like a charity ParkRunner turning up to a Sunday jog to find out they’d accidental­ly entered an IronMan triathlon. Even the stripped-out and specialise­d RS Megane Trophy-R struggled with engine temperatur­e, which indicates just how overawed the Focus was. Happiest at taking sunburned photograph­ers back to the pits, it was.

What’s been surprising is – living with the ST since October – how adept it’s been as a winter car. You’d imagine a front-wheel-drive, heavily boosted hot hatch wouldn’t much care for ice, drizzle or leaf mulch. The old Focus ST certainly didn’t – if the torque steer didn’t pull you off a roundabout before the exit you were aiming for, the bump steer would vault you clean over the flowerbeds in the middle. This one’s immeasurab­ly happier in the gritty, slippery real world.

The electronic differenti­al Ford has installed is the star here – it summons enormous, confidence-inspiring traction but with little interferen­ce through the steering wheel. Horsepower totals are now totally potty, and the real currency of greatness is “how much of that can you actually deploy”. Everything from a BMW M3 to the peerless Civic Type R struggles here, but I’m not sure I’ve driven any two-wheeldrive hot hatch that can claw so much purchase – and waste so little grunt – in slimy conditions.

The tyres are magic too – I’ve not bothered with a switch to winters because these Michelins’ ability to clear standing water and maintain bite even when it’s below freezing outside has been sensationa­l.

Over 6,000 miles in, they’re still well-treaded, and despite the weekly cacophony of 19-inch-rim-into-pothole impacts, so far so good on the puncture front. Slowly, the Focus has built up this air of unflappabl­e toughness, of winter invincibil­ity – a world away from the stay-indoorswit­h-a-wet-flannel way it handled a heatwave.

Now, I’m being a bit unfair here – Portimão is a grown-up circuit and the more specialise­d likes of the Aston DBS and Toyota Supra also melted back at TG24. The Focus, like those unlikely comparable­s, is a road car first, and a track car very begrudging­ly. That makes the way Ford has set-up the ST’s rigid modes all the more galling. There is a Track mode – which automatica­lly disables the stability control, and comes with a warning not to deploy it on public roads – but you’d never venture into it at all, because it ramps up the steering weight to maximum porridge.

The suspension, meanwhile, feels like it’s had three-day-old, baked-on oatmeal poured into the dampers. So, why a frustratio­n? Because the engine mapping in Track mode is hilariousl­y naughty – the full suite of exhaust fireworks, and a Group B Audi warble from the 2.3-litre torquemons­ter up front. I’d love to have that mixed with a cushier ride, but if configurab­ility’s your thing, you’ll need a Hyundai i30N.

Winter is a war of attrition on cars, but the ST is based on a fundamenta­lly sound family car, so it’s aced the little things too.

I’ve only had to top up the generous washer fluid reservoir once.

The heated front windscreen remains a frosty-morning godsend.

The heated seats are world-class. Almost dangerousl­y, arse-griddlingl­y hot, while the heated steering wheel I scoffed at on the spec sheet has become the default next-button-press after the stupidly placed starter button, which needs a triple-jointed wrist to locate. The Focus’s sinfully dreary cabin is never a welcoming cell to inhabit, especially on a dark, miserable Monday morning, but within a mile or so every surface is piping hot and it’s as cosseting as an Aga in a landed gentry kitchen. The floor mats are standing up resolutely to an onslaught of muddy, wet shoes. The seat bolsters remain upstanding.

The only winter duty the ST’s been flummoxed by is illuminati­ng the road without blinding my fellow motorist. The ST, as standard, is fitted with Ford’s adaptive LED headlights, featuring the steadily more familiar matrix beam tech that turns off individual LEDs to create a tunnel of dimmer light when facing oncoming cars, while keeping the verges bathed in illuminati­on.

The power of the beam is so strong I sometimes wonder if I can Morse code message the Internatio­nal Space Station, but the frequency with which other drivers blip their own main beam to indicate the Ford has not cut them out of the glare has forced me to turn the feature off. The latest ST is a cracking winter weapon, but when it’s dark and misty, even the most unflappabl­e car is only as quick, and as composed, as far as it can see. So, in the heat of summer, it runs out of tyres, and in the dark of winter, it outruns its lights.

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