Wheels (Australia)

FORD Focus ST

CLEAN BOWLED AFTER A 36-MONTH INNINGS

- ANDY ENRIGHT

YOU MAY HAVE noticed a bit of a theme with this series. It usually celebrates a car that was once good, great or merely interestin­g but which tended to hang around a bit too long, by which point customers become interested in something newer and shinier. That’s not the case with the just-axed Ford Focus ST. Recently departed performanc­e title MOTOR gave the hot Ford hatch a runner-up position at this year’s Sports Car of the Year award. It was in its pomp, a fact underscore­d by demand easily outstrippi­ng supply.

So why has this peach of a performanc­e hatch dropped off the twig? Blame the current global supply issues that have strangled production to such an extent that the Australian business case pretty much collapsed. Ford had already pared the Focus range back to just the ST and ST X variants in 2022 and had taken orders for the facelifted cars, due later this year. Semiconduc­tor supply was such that cars destined for European markets are due to be shipped with the older SYNC3 infotainme­nt system and an 8.0-inch touchscree­n, rather than the promised SYNC4 and 13.2-inch screen. Now Australia’s not getting the updated car at all, nor, come to that, its little sibling, the Fiesta ST.

Instead, Ford says it’s concentrat­ing on high-volume vehicles such as Ranger, Everest and Puma, so it could be some time before we see another Ford hot hatch worthy of the name. That’s a shame as the ST had developed into a great driver’s car. The original ST170, based on the first-generation Focus, debuted here in 2003 carrying a rather self-conscious $37K sticker price. While it handled well and 127kW wasn’t to be sniffed at, its reedy 197Nm – less than the smaller and lighter Clio 172 – meant you needed to work it hard.

That was rectified in 2005 with the secondgene­ration Focus ST, sold here as the XR5 Turbo, which featured a 2.5-litre inline five-cylinder Volvo boat anchor up front which was gutsy enough to generate 320Nm of torque to accompany its 166kW. It sounded great but the Focus’s reputation for lithe handling was dulled a little by the weight in the nose.

Improvemen­t arrived with the 188kW/366Nm 2.0-litre turbo four fitted to the third-generation ST in 2012, arriving after a two-year hiatus. Quicker and nimbler but with amorphous styling that lived in the shadow of its RS sibling, the ST always felt like accepting second best.

That changed with the fourth-generation car, launched in 2019. This had the best of everything: plenty of punch (206kW/420Nm) from the decently sized 2.3-litre four, playful handling, sharp styling, a choice of a six-speed manual or a seven-speed auto, and no Focus RS big brother to dull its shine. While it does lack the collectibl­e cachet of an RS badge, having been on sale here for a mere three years, the fourthgen ST has second-tier future classic written all over it. Vale, Focus ST. You’ll be missed.

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