This car, the predecessor to the much more famous Pantera, was limited to 401 units between 1967 and '71. And, depending on which website you read, there are only around 150 left in existence. And on top of that, there’s only one (as far as we know) living in Africa. Seeing a Mangusta in the metal is rare. Cruising Johannesburg in one is once in a lifetime stuff. Of course I joined in on the action and documented the occasion on video which you can watch here.
Technically De Tomaso is an Italian brand but its founder, Alejandro de Tomaso was born in Argentina – note the baby blue and white flag in its numerous badges. Power comes from a mid-mounted Ford V8 in either 289 or 302 cubic inches depending on when it was made and where it was sold. This model is the rarer and interestingly more powerful European 289, and its internals show evidence of fettling by famed American tuner Carroll Shelby, a technical associate of Alejandro.
The word Mangusta is Italian for Mongoose, an animal noted for its cobra-killing abilities. And the name’s no coincidence. The Mangusta was originally designed as a race car in an agreement with Carroll Shelby to replace the AC Cobra. That is until the GT40 program put an end to plans. De Tomaso then switched to road-going production and devised the name, probably as a cheeky response to Shelby’s reneged deal.