The Toyota Supra Is Good, But It’s Not the Japanese Sports Car I Wanted
Dec 28, 2020
Everything about the prospect of a new Supra was exciting. I loved that Toyota was once again selling a powerful rear-wheel-drive sports car. That it was finally going to revive its halo performance car, one I’ve only gotten to know through reruns of The Fast and the Furious and by watching fourth-generation examples skyrocket in price on Bring a Trailer. This was going to be my generation’s Supra. And it is, kind
Take away the Supra badging and I’m extremely happy with the car. With that name tacked onto the rear bumper, it doesn’t quite work for me
This new Supra is not the Japanese legend I wanted it to be. It’s no secret that the fifth-generation car was co-engineered with BMW. It’s built on the same platform and shares powertrains with the BMW Z4. And that’s fine. I might have been able to accept that, if that’s where the line had been drawn. But it’s not.
On the outside, it looks the part. But that’s about it. The key fob is BMW. The interior appears to be almost fully BMW—iDrive infotainment system, steering wheel, shifter, light controls, heads-up display. The chimes are BMW. It’s all BMW. And, yes, it drives like a BMW.
That’s not the worst thing in the world, in practice. BMWs work. The company’s history of M cars demonstrates it knows how a performance car should feel. The Supra, in the least, meets that mark. Hell, I even own three older 3-Series at this very moment. My problem is, nowadays, BMW doesn’t make the most exciting sports cars. And they’re obviously not known for Japanese tuner cars.
Spiritually, the new Supra leaves me hanging.
America has mid-level European sports cars. They’re fine. But we don’t have a multitude of special-feeling Japanese sports cars. That’s the bar I set for the Supra. Miata, but more exhilarating. Toyota 86, but more grown-up. Nissan 370Z, but not 10 or more years old.
There’s no authenticity to the Supra as a Japanese sports car. It’s depressing for people (me) who fantasize over special Nineties Japanese cars, like the R34 Nissan Skyline GT-R, the fourth-generation Supra, the FD Mazda RX-7 and the like. We want the Supra to be that. I want the Supra to fill that void. It can’t do it. It just isn’t true to that spirit.
If I wanted a BMW, I’d buy a BMW.
With that out of the way, I have to admit I did enjoy racking up miles in the thing.
Acceleration in the 382-horsepower 3.0-liter-equipped Supra is beyond adequate. Toyota claims it does 0-60 in 3.8 seconds, and I absolutely believe it. Nothing more is needed. The car is a bit quiet, and the noises it makes aren’t the most exciting, even in Sport mode, but there’s still enough sound there to remind you you’re behind the wheel of something fun. There’s’s nothing wrong here that an aftermarket exhaust can’t fix.
The Supra also feels nimble as hell. Michelin Pilot Super Sport tires gave me a surplus of confidence putting the car through its paces on winding country backroads. Grip, grip, and more grip was all I was dealt. Coming out of corners, the electric limited-slip differential in the rear helped me put power down without issue. I’m always a little hesitant with e-diffs, but I felt more in-tune and comfortable with it in the Supra than I have in comparable sports cars.
Not everything about the Supra’s performance is perfect.
When not in Sport mode, I found the car to be mostly compliant. But over bridge joints and similar road imperfections, the car bounces around so much I felt like I was going to fly through the windshield. Its suspension setup isn’t ideal for regular driving over haggard New York City streets. And definitely not in Sport mode, which sets the suspension too intense for anything that isn’t a perfectly smooth road or track.