Steve Cropley: The GR Yaris lives up to the hype

Steve Cropley: The GR Yaris lives up to the hype

Autocar

Published

Keep it up, Toyota: Aygo X looks ace and GR Yaris is a belter

Cropley's borrowed a colleague's Toyota long-termer for his first taste of the five-star hot hatch

This week, Cropley finally tries the GR Yaris (and confirms that it's every bit as good as we say), muses the legacy of outgoing Suzuki CEO Osamu Suzuki and ponders the desirability of the Jaguar XF.

*Monday*

Now I know what the fuss is about, and it’s all justified. I’ve been driving Matt Prior’s Toyota GR Yaris long-termer, fresh from its five-star road test, having managed to swipe it for a few days. It’s terrific. So much about this hot supermini meets my ideals: the size, the driving position, the beautiful steering, the engine response, the engine note (you can quibble that it’s fake; I don’t care) and even the ride. Sure, it’s very firm, but it refuses to crash into bumps like I expected. Prior says the lesser version without track dampers or a differential is a bit less edgy. They can keep it.

Driving the GR Yaris made me recall two wildly disparate cars from my past. The first was an early Lotus Elise fitted with unfeasibly expensive and sophisticated Dynamic suspension. That had the same tautness and control yet no crash. The other (don’t laugh) was a rusty two-door Alfa Romeo Alfasud Ti that I briefly owned – fondly remembered on the grounds of size, steering quality and sheer, unrivalled willingness to perform. It was always, without compromise, my ally on journeys. The GR Yaris is the same.

*Tuesday*

Just had news that one of my heroes among car leaders, Osamu Suzuki, is entering well-earned retirement at 91, having spent the past 20 years as chairman of his eponymous company and the 20 years before that as CEO. His profile has never been as big as he deserves: under his guidance, Suzuki has done things others find impossible. It has made decent money out of cheap and tiny cars, succeeded in emerging markets (India), fearlessly launched quirky designs (Ignis, Jimny) and met crash regulations while keeping its cars amazingly light. Let’s hope that Suzuki’s new crew is as good at maintaining the traditions.

*Wednesday*

The locked-down but ever-active British Motor Museum (just off the M40 at Gaydon) has announced a deal with Sussex-based artwork specialists King & McGaw to sell a magnificent range of historic, hand-developed “heritage images” covering famous British car brands from the Roaring Twenties to the Swinging Sixties. A total of 77 images are so far offered (including the evocative Landie print above) and there will eventually be more, ranging in price from £25 to £200. Full details at britishmotormuseum.co.uk.

*Thursday*

I hadn’t driven a Jaguar XF for quite a while, so I was impressed by the updated Sportbrake P250 that turned up at my place for a few days. It’s quick, refined, very nicely made and – praise be – generates a lot less road noise than the Germans. (Road noise bugs you more as you get older; perhaps because it’s what’s left as growing mechanical refinement dulls the whirls, whines, grumbles and gurgles that have blanked it for most of our car lives.)

*Friday*

This seems to be my week for loving small Japanese cars. I’m irrationally excited by the first view of the Toyota Aygo X Prologue concept, previewing the next city-sized Aygo to be built in the Czech factory that Toyota formerly shared with Citroën and Peugeot but now fully owns. It suggests the Aygo will be a 3.7m-long SUV-style car more or less identical in proportion to the Suzuki Ignis, of which I’ve recently become a devotee. I might have known that Toyota, whose creative juices are really flowing at present, would see the beauty of this terrific package.

*Want to work with us?*

Big news! Autocar needs a road tester, someone who’s as keen as we are, who really knows cars and who writes well enough to slot right in. Immediate prior experience is helpful but not a deal-breaker. Tell us why you’re the perfect person for the job through careers.haymarket.com.

*READ MORE*

*New Toyota GR Yaris makes first UK appearance at Goodwood *

*Out of character cars: Nissan Nismo GT-R vs Toyota GR Yaris vs Alpine A110 *

*Toyota GR Yaris 2021 long-term review*

Full Article