Over the years Jaguar has been urged to make a ‘new E- Type’, a ‘new Mk2’ and even a ‘new XJ220’. Instead, it’s built a ‘new Land Rover’. What’s more, it’s surprisingly good.
If
you want a sports-minded SUV that can deliver both pace and space – with a
healthy dose of grace – then the new F-Pace may well be the best SUV of all.
Only a Porsche Macan can match it dynamically. Only a boxy trad 4x4 can better
it for versatility.
The
F-Pace is a seminal car for Jaguar, and will reach more customers in more
markets than any Jaguar before. The company now has a car that will rival
brother brand Land Rover in sales and revenues. Never mind that to emulate Land
Rover’s success, it has entered Land Rover’s segment.
With
the premium SUV market booming, with the SUV F-Pace sure to appeal to a range
of younger customers, and Jaguar Land Rover’s time-honoured expertise in
all-wheel-drive technology, it is surely obvious what Jaguar’s next new car
should be? A smaller SUV to build on the F-Pace’s appeal? A bigger SUV to rake
in juicy Range Rover-style profts?
The
answer, I gather, is a little brother to the F-Pace. But what Jaguar needs
soon, or so I suggest, is another sports car. As the late, great footballer
Johan Cruyf said: ‘Winning is just one day. A reputation lasts a lifetime.’ Now
is the time for reinvigorated Jaguar to invest in its reputation, and the
sports car soul that apparently guided the design and development of the
F-Pace. This is the sports car soul that was inspired by the C-, D- and
E-Types; the sports car soul that the F-Type nobly rekindled; the soul that is
the essence of the Jaguar brand, and underpins the credibility of the F-Pace,
XE, XF and every other new Jaguar.
A
smaller-than-F-Type roadster (and coupe) costing about R750k would do nicely.
It would be a Boxster, SLK and BMW Z4 rival, released at a time when its German
competitors are weak (especially now that Porsche has sullied its new Boxster
with turbo four power, in place of a more entertaining naturally aspirated
six).
It
would make a tidy proft, buttress the Jaguar brand, strengthen its sports car
credentials, and encourage a younger sportier audience to buy a Jaguar for the
frst time since those halcyon days of the E-Type. This strategy follows highly
proftable Porsche, of course. Porsche now makes most of its money from SUVs.
Last year, out of 225 000 cars sold globally, more than 153 were SUVs. The
ratio of SUVs to sports cars widens every year. Porsche is a sports car company
that (whisper it) is primarily an SUV maker. Just as Jaguar will be, once the
F-Pace gets into its stride.
To
remind us all that Porsche is a great sports car maker (that happens, sotto
voce, to make SUVs) Porsche has recently gone on the sports car ofensive.
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