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Hooning a Mustang Dark Horse on Miami’s F1 Track Is the Hottest of Hot Laps

Racetracks always look so small on TV, whether you're pretend driving them or watching someone do it in real life. And given the speed that modern Formula 1 cars carry through corners, they need all the asphalt and run-off room they can get. Typically both are in short supply at the kinds of urban circuits F1's been frequenting lately, but the Miami International Autodrome is different, because it's a semi-permanent venue that carves a path of its own across the Hard Rock Stadium's many parking lots. So as a track, it's got a surprisingly nice shape to it—something I was reminded of before Sunday's race, when I got my brain scrambled in a Ford Mustang Dark Horse during a Pirelli Hot Lap.

The Miami circuit is 3.3 miles long with 19 corners of all speeds. Most of it's on flat ground, save for the Turn 14-15 chicane, which, despite being the slowest section of the track, is actually my favorite. I love the rise up to 15, coupled with the overpass and the walls closing in; it feels like I'm in Ridge Racer in real life, if only for a second. Of course, it helped that my guide for this experience was Ford factory driver Chris Mies, who makes his living racing a Mustang GT3 in IMSA.

There were other, more exotic options in terms of vehicles, like a Ferrari 296 GTB, Mercedes-AMG GT, Aston Martin DBX707, and McLaren 750S. But I was actually most excited to go for my ride in the Dark Horse, since I still hadn't been inside the new Mustang, and what's not to love about a 500-horsepower, five-liter V8 tethered to a six-speed? Chris definitely seemed to endorse the powertrain, as you'll hear during the on-board video below, and I think my constant hooting and hollering speaks for itself.

This Dark Horse was also equipped with the optional $4,995 Handling Package, which comes with wider 19-inch wheels, magnetic dampers, adjustable strut top mounts and Pirelli's P Zero Trofeo RS tires made specifically for this car. This rubber is formulated with layers of multiple compounds, a process that Pirelli told me draws from its construction of F1 tires, for improved performance in multiple respects. A harder inner tread is designed to enhance steering feedback as a softer outer

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