“They really named it that? Are you kidding?”
Sure, there were a number of instances over the years where you likely asked that question. I’m not sure if it was when you first saw a Ford Probe or a Daihatsu Naked, or maybe it was an Isuzu Light Dump or a Studebaker Dictator. If English is your first language, a Mazda Laputa or Mitsubishi Pajero doesn’t seem that bad, but if you speak Spanish, that’s not the case. Even Ferrari gave us a model called the FXXK.


Still, I struggle to think of a worse choice than Ford made when they decided to name a sporty model of their popular compact. Why did no one see the inappropriateness of calling a car the “Grabber”? It’s a name so bad that we have no choice but to revive it on a cool retro-themed version of Ford’s latest hot-selling compact. Why not?
I’d Still Take One Over A Dodge Dart
On the surface, the current Ford Maverick compact unibody truck and the compact sedan from Ford’s past that it’s named after have absolutely nothing in common. The truth is that their missions were almost identical.

When the Maverick pickup debuted in 2022 at around $20,000, it was seen as an ultra-competitive price for something utilitarian that still wasn’t devoid of usable interior and cargo space. The original Maverick’s pricing started at $1,995 (or around $18,000 in today’s dollars) when it was introduced on April 17, 1969. Billed as “the simple car”, it offered tremendous value for your buck.


Ford’s first compact, the Falcon, was a huge hit when it popped on the scene for 1960. Dull as turnips, it sold well against tiny foreign cars, but by the late sixties the imports were getting better and offered more exciting alternatives like the Datsun 510. Ford needed something a bit more stylish to keep pace, and the Maverick coupe offered buyers at Ford dealers across the nation just that.
The swoopier long hood/short-deck mini-Mustang fastback looks of the new Maverick were a welcome change from the boxy old Falcon. The interior was livable but bare-bones basic without a glove box on the earliest ones; there was just a tray below a big chunk of blank dashboard. Even when optioned out with a bright color and tartan cloth, it looked painfully austere:

At least Ford offered fun color names for this otherwise depressingly basic car. “Anti-Establish Mint,” “Hulla Blue,” “Freudian Gilt,” and “Thanks Vermillion” were names supposedly sent to then-Ford President Lee Iacocca by a friend, and Lido had the guts to use them.

If you went to high school in late eighties America, I’m sure that at least one of your classmates or impoverished teachers had a bedraggled hand-me-down ‘Mav, though by then “Anti-Establish Mint” had aged to look more like “Day Old Snot.” Available initially with a choice of inaccurately named “Thriftpower” straight sixes, the sluggish performance was matched only by the inability of these motors to die. Believe me, we tried to kill them, and our parents knew it.
The upcoming four-cylinder 1971 Pinto was to be the subcompact competitor needed to go head-to-head with the smallest of the outsiders; the Maverick was a slightly larger option and by 1971 offered a four-door model as well.

Still, it didn’t cost much more than the Pinto; at a starting point only a few hundred dollars more than a VW Beetle, that Maverick was ostensibly a step up that gave you a lot more car for just a little more cash. The original Maverick was just as big a hit on the market as the new one is today, with first-year sales of 579,000 units (yes, that approaches the record-breaking 1965 Mustang figures). By the time it was replaced in 1978 by the Fox-platform Fairmont, the original Maverick had sold 2.1 million units.

Today’s Maverick is exactly the same thing as the earlier one in concept. As a big step above entry-level hatchbacks or subcompact crossovers, it gives buyers a budget F-150 feel in the same way that the 1970 model had to provide a slice of the bigger Torino or LTD at a smaller size and price point. Of course, to appease those who wanted more from Ford “sports” model, it was an expected addition. Ford gave it to them, and we’ll do the same thing today, even keeping the original name of the first Maverick’s enthusiast-oriented addition. That’s a bad idea, by the way.
Well, The Camaro Was Called “The Hugger” At The Time
Exactly why would you call a car – or any product for that matter – the Grabber? Now, naturally, we’re the Autopian, so our mind is in the gutter at all times, but it still seems odd that Ford would choose such a name and keep it as an option for six years. Possibly the word was supposed to refer to this sporting Maverick’s skills at gripping the road or forcibly removing competitors from the street. Ironically, neither was within the capabilities of the Grabber.

What you see in the pictures of the Grabber model shown here is literally all you get with the coupes-only package: bigger and racier-looking rolling stock, graphic stripes on a custom paint treatment, and, well, that’s about it. Grabbers for 1971 and 72 gave you a hood with twin “scoops” that scooped no air. Powertrain and suspension with the package also received a whole lot of nothing, though starting in ’71 you could at least get a 210-horsepower small block 302 V8 in place of the miserable sixes to make your Grabber a little more grabby.

Those ’71 and ’72 Grabbers even featured “Sport Lamps”. Like the rest of the Grabber package, the lights were of the “what you see is what you get” variety. These were made from leftover tooling of turn signals from a 1969 Mercury Cougar and just had turn signal bulbs in them, so the offered absolutely no forward illumination and were essentially pretend fog lights. They didn’t blink with the turn signals or at all unless you yanked the “Sport Lamp” switch off and on repeatedly for a hazard flasher effect; appearance over functionality in the malaise tradition.

As silly as it was, the Grabber package did make the Maverick at least seem fun in a Mini-Me Mach I or Boss ‘Stang sort of way.
Later Grabber packages lost all but the graphic enhancements and wheels, yet they were still offered in bold colors (Grabber blue, Grabber Lime, etc.). The “sport lamps” are now the turn signals above the 5MPH ram bars. Models from 1973 on did receive a firmer suspension; one of the first non-appearance-related items a Grabber received.

Wow, I think we have a 1974 Hamilton Beach electric carving knife that gets used exactly twice a year in the greenish harvest gold color of the stripes on the car above. I could probably get a new one on Amazon for twenty bucks, but it would probably carve two Christmas dinners before dying.

With such a cheesy appearance, the Grabber seems like the last automotive trim package that we should revisit for the revived Maverick. It also would make no sense to resurrect a name that sounds like a person who’d be called into the HR office for a reprimand. Naturally, that’s what we’re going to do.
It Could Be A Cash Grab
The current Maverick pickup is almost more functional and non-nonsense than the original Ford sedan it shares a name with. Nothing wrong with it, but it wouldn’t hurt to, as Ford said in their old ads, “jazz it up” a bit.

I’m going to use the graphics package from the later Grabbers like this 1974 model for inspiration, here shown in what I am assuming is “Grabber Blue”.

This one for sale has that two-barrel 302 under the hood with a likely humorous power-to-displacement ratio.

The interior of this later “simple machine” even has bucket seats and the luxury of a glove box lid.

That’s one of the last American cars built with a metal dashboard. Is it just me or do orange interiors need to come back like RIGHT NOW?

Anyway, here again is that later model that we’re going to use to recreate on our new Grabber:

We’ll start with a blue 2025 Maverick to add our paint treatment. You’ll note the white rocker panels with stripes that help to break up the thick side profile of the little pickup. The white wheels are a large-diameter interpretation of the five-slot rolling stock used on a number of Ford models in the late seventies including the Pinto Cruising Wagon and Mustang II.
Here’s an animation of taking the poor, tasteful original truck and turning it into this monstrosity:
The big Grabber feature is at the rear: the SportsBack. Most Mavericks you see on the street have some kind of cover for the cargo bed; the SportsBack would be a fiberglass body-colored three-piece arrangement to provide this function and also give the Grabber a distinctive appearance. A decklid spoiler completes the look.
The SportsBack includes a “hoop” at the back of the cabin to disguise the very upright look of the Maverick backlight. Small black graphics are added to the backs of the rear door windows to give the illusion that the glass is angled to complement the rake of the sail panels (and give more of a pronounced Hoffmeister kink).

The actual bed cover is two pieces: a “trunk lid” at the back and another section that meets the backlight, which is usually fixed.

Both sections can be removed to allow the carrying of tall objects. The pieces can naturally be carried in the bed with whatever oversized thing you’re hauling, and the rear hoop stays fixed in place.

There’s more. An optional rear bar that looks kind of like a Plymouth Superbird wing actually can support holding long items over the roof:

Lastly, we could even offer additional removable components that incorporate that rear bar to create a rear enclosed cargo cap for the small bed:

The whole unit could likely be added to any Maverick but Ford would keep it as a Grabber exclusive at least initially. That’s one part of this Grabber that most of the original didn’t offer: something functional.
Would You Grab One For Yourself?
Currently, Ford is pretty much alone in the small unibody pickup truck market (with the possible exception of the Hyundai Santa Cruz). This situation almost certainly won’t last, and while Ford has momentum, it wouldn’t hurt for them to add some new options for the Maverick in terms of styling and functionality. I can almost promise you that if Ford doesn’t do it themselves, the aftermarket will step in to offer these choices.
No, we wouldn’t have to name such a flashy custom factory model after someone who does inappropriate acts, but why not? Let General Motors and Stellantis have their “Sport” or “GT” edition pickups; Ford should revive the “Grabber” to literally grab even more market share for themselves.
Top graphic base image: Ford
I think it needs sport lights inset into those squares of blank sheetmetal between the grille and the headlights. Square lights, with a border of bodycolor metal all around.
It could be worse, at least Ford never made a special edition Probe Grabber although a first generation Probe Turbo Grabber could have been a hit.
I’d get Grabbed!
She’ll let ya
Monstrosity ?? I think it looks good, except for the giant wheels and tires. Not sure why you went that large.
Oh the memories. My high school social group, made up of gear heads and sarcastic miscreants, loved to make jokes about the Grabber name to those who drove them to school. Such a silly name, but a gold mine for crude, adolescent humor (which I say as though my sense of humor ever matured after age nine).
I do like what you have made here, Bishop, especially the wheels and the Bronco II-style cargo cap. I honestly can’t decide if I like the blue with white stripes or white with blue stripes better, which I guess means they both look nice.
Those wheels are perfect!! I want stripes to make a come back as well.
Strips really should make a return. I am thankful that Ford still offers two-tone paint on the F-series, but I would love to see more vehicles with actual colors (not grey, black, or white) with some fun stripe packages!
Jellybeans are making a comeback? Yay!
In the litany of historically bad car names, you’ve got to include the Dodge Dart Swinger, and I can’t hear Grabber without thinking of Mr. Banana Grabber from Arrested Development. Still, I kinda like this Grabber, ugh, package. The wheels are bitchin’.
Zaba-caba-dabra!! Granny’s gonna grab ya!
Everything about this mockup rules! It’s giving big 2001 energy despite the ‘70s inspirations. Just needs a cooler in the glovebox and some 3D Cool Ranch in the side door.
Ford, hire this man!
I like this. The name, the stripes, the wheels, all of it! The only thing it’s missing is the plaid seats.
You left this out!
https://youtu.be/um8ScSZsFQ8?si=q4n_KkjOixmmfPS2
Is that Peter Thomas’s voice?
My wife did an industrial film about fasteners for Textron Lycoming that he narrated. I wanted to do a EDM mix of “you can’t see them but they’re there” Such a great voice.
Not in this ad, but in others “dual racing mirrors, which one will win?” , which is perhaps the best car ad line ever.
The Grabber was the Hood. Air Grabber, like the Dodge Air Grabber hood. I think the Dart Swinger name was worse, maybe the Kaiser and dictators of the 40’s were perhaps the wrong time for those. Certainly the LUV Mighty Mike, was kind of creepy weird to me too.
At least it wasn’t Magic Mike.
Name and oversized wheels aside, I think that could do all right. There’s got to be at least some people left with a sense of fun.
Keep the paint, stripes and wheels, lose the hoop skirt and sport back and you’ve got a real attention Grabber. I miss stripey cars.
Wow…jut…wow. I actually like the potential functionality, even if the name would never fly today. And the paint detail actually makes the truck look a lot better IMO.
And the wheels…”chef’s kiss” to those five slots!
My sister had a 70s Maverick in the early/mid 1980s and it was a total POS. It seem to be way older than 10ish years. Gods cars back then aged like 1970s humans who lived, drank, and smoked hard.
The first car I remember was an Orange/red with white stripes Maverick Grabber II.
I have a soft spot for them, even before the opportunity for Dad jokes. “You are on a date with a pretty woman and another pretty woman walks by. What do you do?” “Grabber II”
Anyway, I nearly died in the back seat of that Grabber II. Dad was rear ended by a drunk going 50+ mph. I was NOT wearing my seatbelt, since the dad was sick of the rear seatbelt alarms going off and he buckled them and shoved them under the seat. I bounced between the rear seat cushion and back of his seat and came out with a sore neck (which ended up being a surgery 40 years later).
Meanwhile, the rear subframe broke loose from the body and that lap belt was pulled into the rear firewall so hard that it snapped. If I had been wearing a seatbelt, I would have been cut in half by the belt.
I think I might be the only person in the world to have survived an accident because he was NOT wearing a seat belt.
But nevertheless, I still have fond memories of that Maverick.
My father survived by not wearing a seatbelt, ironically, while trying to kill himself. Drove off mountain highway at high speed, Opel GT hit tree, engine ended up in the driver’s seat, and he ended up in the passenger footwell.
Yeah, there are cases where you survive an accident without a seatbelt and die with one.
My in my case, it is 100% clear that I survived BECAUSE I wasn’t wearing a seatbelt. That’s extremely rare.
PS, modern cars have much stricter rules on how seatbelts are mounted than old Mavericks. The car that hit the Maverick happened to have the exact bumper height to knock the body off the rear subframe. Combined with the lap belt and the mounting of the seatbelts to the subframe, I would have been very unlucky kid if I was wearing my belt. Very unlucky because I happened to be in the seat during a “golden bb” event that made it less safe to be belted than unbelted. In 99%+ of accidents in that old Maverick, it would have been safer to wear a seatbelt. With a modern car that has 3 point belts and better rules about how to mount them, the “golden bb” chance would have been something like 0.00001% instead of 1%.
One of the many reasons I’m a statistical anomaly.
I’m not arguing against seatbelt use.
I think the name “Grabber” came from the “Grabber Tires” made by General. They grab asphalt not p***y.
There was also the “Grabber” hood scoops, though those were MOPAR.
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Heck, just give me the stripe package on the Mav’s Lobo trim. More cars with stripe packages, please!
Still chuckling at Mazda Laputa, I had to google to be sure it was real because I thought you just made it up for comedic effect.
Nobody should ever rip on the Chevy Nova again.
You can finally bring Laputas into the US now that some of them are over 25 years old. Wait what?
In high school, my buddy Steve had a blue Maverick we named Puff the Tragic Wagon. We would sing “Puff, the tragic wagon lived at Steve’s…”
That was as far as we got.
Anyway, Puff had a habit of dying unexpectedly. You just had to give it a minute, and it would usually restart.
One day, we were driving to Steve’s house for lunch. We had an open campus, so everyone with a car usually left for lunch, and the streets were packed with students trying to get something to eat.
So we’re driving along in Puff when it died. Steve steered it into the turn lane and started trying to revive it.
A bunch of high school douchebags in a new Z28 drove past us, and that group of guys, who all looked exactly how you think a bunch of 1980’s guys in a 3rd gen Camaro would look, all laughed and jeered at us as they went by.
Including the driver.
What he DIDN’T do was see the old guy in the big Buick who had stopped for traffic, and Camaro guy rear ended him hard.
Puff chose that moment to spring back to life, and off to lunch we went.
All that to say, those wheels are FIRE, Bishop.
Thanks! That sounds like a perfect scene from an eighties teen angst movie by John Hughes filmed in the north Chicago suburbs. Starring John and Joan Cusack.
Bingo! It happened in 1988 or 89.
Grabber? Hugger? I Hardly even know-er!
I figured that would be the second or third comment and you people do not disappoint.
I saw a Grabber Blue Mustang yesterday and said that OUT LOUD just to myself, for no apparent reason.
See, when I started my career, there were managers that thought nothing of Grabber and Hugger. They only thought they had crossed a line with Poker.
They named an electric SUV the Mustang Mach E. So no surprise on names.
And my friend in HS 83-85 had a Maverick for a short time. He tried to replace the bench seat with buckets & somehow ended up propping the seats on wood blocks. For the most 80s comment ever: we were going to SERVICE MERCHANDISE so I could buy a COMMODORE 64 computer in his MAVERICK.
I still remember laughing hysterically when the blocks fell over, he dropped 3-4″ in the interior, and was yelling at me and another that we had to fix the blocks before the light turned green.
Ahh safety 😀
“Grabber”? Sounds like some sort of Presidential Edition.