This review first appeared in the September 2025 edition of the Cruisin' News, "Oregon, Nevada and California's classic auto news & marketplace."
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Sacramento, California -- All these years, it has followed me around.
At the 1964 Indianapolis 500.
At the 1964 World's Fair in New York.
My mother's first car, a notable fact given that she grew up in poverty and did not get her first driver's license until she was 40 years old.
The car in which I learned to drive.
It's a Ford Mustang, of course ... and yeah, the name still has a romantic ring to it, right?
My recent week in a Mustang Premium coupe certainly proved the point. In traffic, fellow motorists gave me a thumbs-up. Parked in various lots around town, my beauty wearing "Carbonized Gray Metallic" paint drew admiring crowds.
I'm not sure that the creators of the Mustang envisioned all that would come when the model was introduced in the early days of Lyndon Johnson's presidency.
Naturally, a lot has happened since then to bring the Mustang into the modern age.
Most pleasant for me was the 2.3-liter turbocharged power plant rated at 315 horsepower. There's a satisfying rumble when starting the car, and my tester felt strong and smooth when opened up on the highway. It felt more comfortable at 70 miles per hour than it did at 35 mph.
The tested Mustang -- stickered at $51,935 -- included a fair number of high-end components. That list included Brembo brakes, a 13.2-inch center stack screen, specialized ambient lighting and a heated leather-wrapped steering wheel.
For all of its muscle, fuel mileage was pretty fair at 21 miles per gallon in the city and 29 mpg on the highway.
Back in the day, it was common for owners of specific sports cars to wave at each other on the highway. You get a little bit of that feeling in the Mustang ... Call it the price (or reward) for being an icon.
There are so many sports cars on the market now -- and so much horsepower -- that it's easy to get lost in the blizzard of nicely shaped machines.
But the Mustang takes things a step further, with a strong sense of history behind the wheel, back to a time when American automakers were competing furiously ... and not quite hearing or seeing the wave of high-mileage, foreign-made cars on the horizon.
Philosophy and nostalgia aside, the current Mustang remains a pleasure to drive.
The fact that it's part of automotive history -- and still a head-turner among all ages -- is just a bonus.

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