Why A New Toyota MR2 Could Be Just What The GT86 Needs

Toyota’s GT86 has sometimes struggled to forge the kind of reputation it deserves, but having two cool big brothers could rub off nicely…
Why A New Toyota MR2 Could Be Just What The GT86 Needs

The Toyota GT86 is, from one perspective, exactly our sort of car. It’s fairly lightweight, rear-wheel drive, revvy and it handles like an absolute dream. But that’s never stopped it attracting a fair bit of criticism – almost always for a perceived lack of pace.

Never mind that such complaints are totally missing the point of the car; that’s an argument we’ve had before and don’t need to have again right now. The fact is that some people think that the GT86, as Toyota’s only sports car, just hasn’t got big enough cojones. Fortunately for them, it soon won’t be Toyota’s only sports car.

Why A New Toyota MR2 Could Be Just What The GT86 Needs

The launch of the Supra has been dragging on for years. A concept here, a teaser there, the odd leak to boot, but finally it’s almost time for the Z4-related sports coupe to make its grand entrance. The front end has already been revealed. We, like you, are looking forward to the full announcement. It’s going to be Toyota’s flagship sports car, reviving a name long respected, loved and lusted after.

That’s great, but for the GT86 it might be a little out of reach to be much of a catalyst in terms of image and sales. The two are at opposite ends of the sports car scale under the Toyota roof with over 150bhp and what’s likely to be a big price gulf between them. What the humble 86 needs is a car between it and the Supra; a two-door with between 250 and 300 ponies and a name that will have people placing orders before they even know the spec. We mean, naturally, the rumoured MR2.

Why A New Toyota MR2 Could Be Just What The GT86 Needs

If it really exists, really is coming and really might have a hybrid-enhanced boxer-four, it could be exactly what the GT86’s doctor ordered. Priced higher but not stupidly so, an MR2 would act as a bridge, linking those cars either side of it and presenting a new idea: a range of three quite different sports cars with different target audiences but the same DNA – the same credibility.

Having an MR2 above it and a Supra above that would release the pressure on the GT86. People who want something faster will have options and simply won’t need to bitch about the genuinely wonderful GT86 any more. In a way it will gently close the door on the negativity and allow those who really see the magic in that car to carry on appreciating it.

The S-FR concept has been mooted as the basis for a future MR2
The S-FR concept has been mooted as the basis for a future MR2

What’s more, being part of a family that contains the nameplates MR2 and Supra would bring with it a fair amount of kudos. Picture the GT86 like a younger brother to Princes William and Harry. William is the real deal, a king in waiting – like the Supra. Harry is the slightly off-beat fun-lover who can be serious too – sounds like a reborn MR2, to us. The third and youngest brother, Prince G.T. Eightysix, knows he’s never going to be on the throne but is cut from the same cloth as his brothers. He is who he is, he’s proud of his talents and people appreciate the work he does.

That’s why the distant – and far from certain – arrival of a new MR2 would be a great thing for the GT86. Maybe then, at long last, the naysayers could move on and the rest of us could admire it in peace. We might also find a few closet fans of the car suddenly praising it openly once it can piggyback on the MR2 and Supra. We’ll have to wait and see.

Comments

Anonymous

Nah. This won’t happen for a good reason: the MX-5 . It’s selling pretty well and Toyota wants a slice of that pie. Remember the last MR-2/MR-S? Yeah, that didn’t go that well, but I think Toyota is giving it another shot and that S-FR concept might do the trick this time.

What we need is a new Celica.

12/17/2018 - 06:00 |
0 | 2
stefano 3

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Thats what I fear, I really want a new MR-2, but a company makes the tings that make more profit, thats a reality, at least we could have a toyota spyder or a RWD Celica

12/18/2018 - 22:27 |
0 | 0
electricpants

its a fine idea but, i have a feeling that theres a 99.9 percent chance that the public will hate the look…. i dont really know how to explain it

12/20/2018 - 14:10 |
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Anonymous

I’d say a spiritual successor is needed.

They should come up with a new name, that gives omage to its heritage, but should be an entity by itself. I doubt that Supra as such will gain any traction of magnitude hoped for, because it is Supra. As a car, it might not be bad, but a Supra is a different thing. If they’d call it something else and maybe later tie it into Supra line… By all means. Let the legend be just that. If it really is as awesome as the nostalgic fanboys remember it being, it will be titled as a new Supra anyway. But it will stand on its own legs.

The same thing with MR2 and Celica. Do not screw with names that stand on their own and have become legendary status. Many (if not all?) manufacturers are to blame in this.

GT86 was in my opinion a good name for this. Light, fun to drive, not very powerful but potential to become legend - a spiritual successor to AE86. Perfect! Pays omage, yet stands on its own feet.

In that sence Mazda did well with its RX cars. RX7 - Legendary. RX8 - not so much. Everyone knows the relation between those two, but RX7 stayed legendary. With MX-5…it was a near-miss imho. Luckily it really stayed true to the original idea and it kind of payed off.

Remember the flac around the new NSX? Yeah. But i forgive honda because i know what the X means, so they experimented with this. It’s a pass. 4-door Mustang, Charger, S1q … not so mutch.

It’s no crack or anything but… and even in worst case leaps better than calling an Eclipse a SUV. Or Dart… what were they thinking with Dart?

12/20/2018 - 19:10 |
0 | 0

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