Before we go any further with this new blog on my adventures in the world of club rallying, I’d like to clear something up. I’m not the sporty type. I can’t run fast and at school I was rubbish at football and rugby. I could barely blag my way through a game of cricket and lived in terror of the annual sports day. Despite my job, I’m not even a dedicated follower of motorsport. 

So now that’s out of the way, how come I’m hooked on the ‘sport’ of rallying? The reason is simple. It’s the best way I’ve ever found to have fun behind the wheel of a car, in fact it’s utterly intoxicating.

I’ve had a go at various things over the years from 12 car rallies to saloon car racing, but now I’m fortunate enough to be rallying again in the car I’ve always coveted most, a Group 4 Mk2 Escort. 

In January, co-driver Dave Jones and I tackled the MGJ Brands Hatch Winter Stages, a one day, single venue, tarmac event. Single venue events are more affordable than two or three day rallies and unlike gravel, sealed surface doesn’t subject a car’s body shell to premature death by extreme shot blasting.

When the day dawned, I’d barely finished a refurb on the Mk2 that took most of last year and a lot of hard graft. Part of that included raising the power of the 2.0-litre JRE Vauxhall C20XE engine from 261bhp to engine builder JRE’s ‘ultimate spec’ of 291bhp. 

Why a Vauxhall engine in a Classic Ford? The ‘Red Top’ is a favourite with Escort rally drivers these days due to its power, strength and reliability, and like the original Ford BDA, the cylinder head was designed by Cosworth. It’s a beast of a thing, revving to 9,000rpm with a spine tingling, howling, soundtrack and ballistic response.

The other departure from standard in the name of outright performance, is the gearbox. Attached to the Red Top is a Drenth six-speed sequential motorsport ‘box, hugely strong with millisecond-quick, full-power, ‘flat’ shifting. 

Stopping power is down to the AP racing brakes with four-pot calipers on the front which seem to stop the Mk2 from any speed without ever fading. The whole package tips the scales at around 900kg, so by road car standards, performance and agility are absolutely off the scale.

We had a good shakedown run at Brands in some patchy, icy and wet conditions, the first event for a while and one I was glad to finish without too much mechanical drama. We slithered to 23rd overall from a field of 68 which included some 2.5-litre, 330bhp Escorts, as well as WRC, turbo and four-wheel-drive cars in the higher classes.