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Is Toyota Ready to Get Sporty?

A new global vehicle platform suggests the conservative automaker may be ready to take risks.

By Clifford Atiyeh Apr 10, 2012 1:39PM
Toyota MR-2 Spyder by MSN AutosToyota hasn't built a sports car under its own brand in seven years, but that may change under a new product-development plan announced Monday by CEO Akio Toyoda, according to a Reuters report.

The Toyota New Global Architecture will let Toyota cut costs by 30 percent while enabling multiple vehicles to be developed for different markets at the same time. Toyota will be developing three front-wheel-drive models under the new platform.

The initiative also will reduce the number of Toyota executives responsible for approving a vehicle in development -- currently up to 100, the report said -- which very directly killed any fun along the way. Just read this quote from chief designer Tukuo Fukuichi:

"Toyota's problem was that it had too many filters. When you have that many people weighing in, you end up developing cars by eliminating the negatives, not by creating something positive, by taking risks."

While the new Scion FR-S will complement the company's only other sporty car under $30,000, the Scion tC, it's still a far cry from when the midengine MR-2 Spyder (pictured above) and the famous Celica coupe were dropped in 2005. The Camry no longer offers a manual transmission, and to get something exciting from Lexus, you'll need to drop $62,000 for the IS F or $375,000 for the untouchable LFA. The only sporty Toyota we can find is a Camry SE, which looks somewhat menacing in black. The new 2013 Avalon at least has a "sport" button that firms up the steering and paddle shifters to raise blood pressure.

Indeed, even Toyota Racing Development, the company's would-be performance division, is more skewed toward bolting superchargers on its trucks and modifying springs on Scion models than anything that might seriously beef up the average Toyota.

"I'm not sure how many future sports cars we have in the pipeline," Toyota spokesman Wade Hoyt told MSN Autos. "But Akio Toyoda is a real car guy. He races. He gets it. And he is determined that the company has to build more exciting, emotional products. That goes beyond styling to include better handling and driver involvement." 

[Source: Reuters via Automotive News]


16Comments
Apr 23, 2012 2:52PM
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If Toyota REALLY wanted to, they could build a heck of a sports car.  Nissan's Z is built on the Infiniti G platform.  The next Camaro will be built on the Caddy ATS platform.  Toyota has a flexible RWD platform already - the one used in the Lexus IS/GS.  With a solid platform (drive an IS - they're fun in a Lexus kinda way), solid engines available, and the ability to acquire 6 speed manuals and 8 speed automatics, all Toyota needs is a vision.  I would love to see the Supra make a comeback.  It was always more of a GT car then a "pure" sports car, but with the right people driving the project, it could be an amazing car. 
Apr 13, 2012 2:26PM
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Where is the Celica GT-FOUR ST205? That became a rally car!!
Apr 13, 2012 11:52AM
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556V has clearly shown that he has never even driven a Toyota. My Highlander has class leading power and because of it's unibody build, handles like a sedan. Same goes for the Camry, maybe not the flashiest car on the road but one of the most dependable and comfortable to drive.
  My last four "junk" Toyotas each went over a hundred thousand miles without ever seeing a repair shop. If that is junk, what would you call the competition....crap?

Apr 12, 2012 11:15AM
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Toyotas are junk, that's the bottom line.  So, if they stick to what they've done in the past, what they call a "sports car" will be a 2-seater commuter car with underwhelming performance and lousy handling.....just like every other Toyota.
Apr 12, 2012 8:24AM
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Yeah, Toyota is going take some risks.....like adding mud flaps and a spoiler to the Avalon.  How daring!
Apr 11, 2012 4:30PM
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Just another example of Toyota grasping at straws

 

Of course we know the ranting of Belt-whipped are just grasping straws as well. Please put the crack pipe down belt-whipped.

Apr 11, 2012 8:37AM
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A Mid-Engine twin turbo V6 or V8 RWD 7 or 8 speed Supra!
Edit: Dual Clutch trans with paddle shifters

Apr 11, 2012 6:22AM
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Agreed IRN but it actually only takes months to turn things around. GM and Ford did it in months right?? Not such a deep hole, Toyota is still one of the top manufacturers in the world and has many loyal followers because of their reputation for reliability and value.
  Only the manufacturer and beltway care about market share, the rest of us just want their well built products and maybe some updated styling.

Apr 11, 2012 5:53AM
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Just another example of Toyota grasping at straws while they watch their market share continue to slip.  A two-seat sports car isn't going to stop their decline.  The last good looking sports car Toyota built was the '82-'86 Supra.  Everything else has been a yawner.
Apr 11, 2012 5:48AM
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I guess Toyota heard all the cries of "bland and boring" going on. Production is back to full swing, a brief period of quality issues is being corrected and now they are going to build more exciting vehicles.

Yes, but keep in mind that it is near impossible to change overnight (you've said it yourself many times).  Toyota has made it a point to build boring automobiles for years now.  They have dug themselves into a very deep hole. It is going to take a long time before anyone hears the name Toyota and smiles at the thought of driving excitement.

 

The FR-S is a start, but they have a long, long, long way to go.

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