Here's Why Mitsubishi Stopped Making Performance Cars

We spoke to Mitsubishi UK MD Rob Lindley to understand the company's current direction, and why that doesn't include products like the Lancer Evo
Here's Why Mitsubishi Stopped Making Performance Cars

Mitsubishi’s back-catalogue of performance cars is nothing short of stunning. Even if you ignore the success of 10 generations of the Lancer Evolution on and off the world’s rally stages, there’s a veritable feast of cool cars to choose from. Various versions of the Eclipse, the spectacularly complicated 3000GT, the Starion, the Lancer 1600 GSR, the Galant VR4 - it’s a fast car heritage other manufacturers would kill for.

And yet, they’re all gone, and no successors are planned. The Eclipse name has been resurrected for a crossover, and something similar might happen to the celebrated Evolution badge. But why?

Mitsubishi resurrected the Eclipse name not so long ago, but for a crossover, rather than a sports car
Mitsubishi resurrected the Eclipse name not so long ago, but for a…

At the Geneva Motor Show, managing director of Mitsubishi UK Rob Lindley explained to us the rationale behind the Japanese manufacturer’s current strategy. “Mitsubishi’s focus is now SUVs, crossover, four-wheel drive, along with alternative fuel technology,” he said, adding “Mitsubishi has moved around different brand positionings, whether it’s been Spacestar style vehicles or sports car derivatives, Evo - it’s not had that clarity of focus.”

If you’re going to stick mainly to one kind of vehicle, SUVs are the best bet. Bigger companies are at it too - fairly soon, Ford will sell only SUVs and crossovers in the US, save for the Mustang.

Cars like the Engelberg Tourer concept intend to exploit Mitsubishi's history with four-wheel drive systems
Cars like the Engelberg Tourer concept intend to exploit Mitsubishi's…

The inexplicable shift towards heavy, high-riding vehicles does still seem to leave a small space for sports cars, evidenced by the retention of the Mustang and also examples like Mitsubishi’s Japanese competitor Toyota, which recently reintroduced the Supra. Then there’s Honda, which, having abandoned fast cars for years, brought back the Civic Type R and the NSX. So surely it’s feasible for Mitsubishi to pull off the same trick? The answer is no, sadly.

“As a business that sells 1.2 million cars worldwide, in a global sense, it’s not a big business. If you try and be in all the different segments of the market and follow trends, like sports cars, it would be difficult to be economically viable,” Lindley explains.

Here's Why Mitsubishi Stopped Making Performance Cars

You might think, then, that Mitsubishi’s rich heritage and motorsport pedigree is something of a burden. Lindley doesn’t agree. “I don’t think it’s a curse. Having any kind of fanbase that has a huge following for a brand is always a massive asset because those type of customers drive other vehicles as well. They may love the historical Evos and sports cars, but there’s a good chance they have other kinds of vehicles in the garage.”

With stints at Mazda and Harley-Davidson on his CV, Lindley knows a thing or two about working in brands with illustrious histories. Mitsubishi’s “heritage with four-wheel drive capability” makes the SUV market “a great place to be in,” he maintains.

Here's Why Mitsubishi Stopped Making Performance Cars

In any case, while a vocal bunch, all those longing to buy a new Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution or perhaps a 3000GT successor simply doesn’t amount to a big group of people. “I don’t know how many people focus in on that [performance cars] now. I don’t think it’s a large segment of today’s car market,” Lindley says.

It’s a fair point - Toyota, which sold nearly nine times the amount of cars as Mitsubishi in 2019, was only able to make a business case for the Supra by establishing a joint venture with BMW. And as much as we love the new Honda NSX, sales have been poor.

Sadly, these just aren’t the kind of cars people aspire to anymore, and in that kind of environment, a Mitsubishi Evo XI doesn’t work.

Comments

Myrmeko (#CTSquad)

They should really have just one sports car.

7 SUVs are more than enough.
There needs to be some diversity.
A low production sports car would not put a dent in their budget whatsoever.
They could make 100 of them as an anniversary edition of the Eclipse or something (just like how Nissan did with the GT-R a few months ago), see if they sell, and if they do, make more.

They could just use the 4B11 engine from the Eclipse Cross and add the turbo back on it, like on the Evo Ralliart.

03/09/2019 - 07:42 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

“It’s a fair point - Toyota, which sold nearly nine times the amount of cars as Mitsubishi in 2019, was only able to make a business case for the Supra by establishing a joint venture with BMW.” Was somehow able to make everyone hate the new Supra by establishing a joint venture with BMW. fixed that for you.

03/09/2019 - 08:18 |
2 | 2
Griffin Mackenzie

The issue is that car companies have somehow forgotten what makes a car cool or great. The reason Honda wasn’t able to sell any NSX’s is because they made it ludicrously expensive and took away every single thing that made the NSX cool or interesting to start with. Toyota is shortly going to suffer a similar fate with neither BMW nor Toyota fans wanting to buy the new “Zupra”

03/09/2019 - 18:42 |
4 | 4
Anonymous

Hmm, less competition for Subaru.

03/12/2019 - 10:23 |
0 | 2
Anonymous

It’s not that people don’t aspire to sports cars anymore, it is just that they are unattainable to the majority of those who want them…

06/06/2019 - 19:20 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

So WRX STI beat the Evo after all…

07/06/2019 - 21:02 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

This is actually wrong and far from the real truth I mean think about it what kind of automaker doesn’t listen to their fanbase and already destroy a car that everyone love like the evo and the eclipse. The answer is simple no automaker is like that. What really happened was that when Mitsubishi went bankrupt and was for sale the Nissan Renault group bought the company right? So Nissan was actually controlling the kind of cars that was being released by Mitsubishi and they were not allowed to make ANY performance cars including the evo and eclipse. But with Nissan now being busy with their lawsuit Renault and Mitsubishi actually collaborated and decided to make the new evo 11. This is the true story and this is the reason why Nissan deserves what they’ve got.

04/21/2020 - 14:42 |
0 | 0

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