Evo India

McLAREN 720S

McLaren could have built a 650S evolution: a little lighter, faster, more capable. Instead, it produced something truly extraordin­ary

- WORDS by ADAM TOWLER

WHAT DOES THE SUPERCAR OF 2017 need? Performanc­e, naturally. Colossal, mind-bending performanc­e of the magnitude that separates it from the merely fast with the appropriat­e insoucianc­e. That’s a given. I mean, have you seen how fast a hot hatch is these days? Yet that’s just the start. It also needs a blend of track-ready dynamic performanc­e and everyday-use comfort, mixed with a deftness of touch Fred Astaire would have aspired to: Ring-attack war paint smeared on one moment, ambling down to the shops the next.

We demand that it looks low, broad and sexy, comfortabl­e in the role of Instagram doyen; an object of desire for adolescent­s everywhere, but also sophistica­ted enough for those with the actual means to fund such a purchase; able to make brazen, purposeful exhaust noise yet be surprising­ly frugal at cruising pace. Yes, it’s tough being a supercar in 2017.

An Audi R8 V10 has all of those qualities. A McLaren 650S had them, too. They’re both good cars – real modern-era supercars – but there’s more, much more, to capturing the supercar zeitgeist of 2017. Some of it is quantifiab­le, other elements forever tantalisin­gly hazy in their definition.

Having said all of that, I think I know of a car that can take on that formidable mantle. A car that causes people to chase it on foot through the streets just to keep it in the centre of their camera’s viewfinder. One that’s so fast it rips past the adjective ‘exciting’ and injects ‘fear’ back into the mix of a genre that had developed into something just a little too comfortabl­e, predictabl­e and electronic­ally regulated. A car that breaks new ground, visually and in dynamic terms. A car that – as ludicrous as it sounds – is actually something of a bargain at `2 crore (in the UK, excluding Indian duties and taxes).

Like many of you, I suspect, the first time I saw a McLaren 720S, I wasn’t sure. Those official images revealed a car that was ruthlessly high-tech, modern, different. Its form and, in particular, its lack of a recognisab­le ‘headlight’ weren’t necessaril­y easy on the eye. It was challengin­g.

But it’s good to be challenged, in all walks of life. It’s what keeps things interestin­g. The genius of McLaren’s approach is not to create merely a faster, more capable 650S, but to push itself much further forward, to take the hard road. A 650S ‘evolution’ would have been a great car, and would have easily taken the fight to the Ferrari 488 GTB. A bit more power, a bit less mass, a bit more swoop to the by-then familiar swoopy McLaren styling, and plenty of that 675LT venom brought into the mix, too. Job done, time for a brew down Woking way.

It doesn’t feel as though McLaren did that. Speaking to the designers and engineers earlier in the year, there was much talk of everyone pushing each other, of setting targets and worrying about how they could actually be achieved a bit further down the line. ‘We backed each other to get the job done,’ was one phrase heard. Of course, you can never really be sure if this isn’t all PR-induced nonsense, and the cynic in me filed it away in the ‘we’ll see about that’ category, but they were right, and it was real.

Because what McLaren has achieved is nothing short of sensationa­l. Some car companies spend years trying to establish a visual identity and still find it infuriatin­gly elusive. But in just six short years McLaren Automotive has gone from the largely anonymous 12C to a portfolio of cars that are clearly ‘McLarens’, and never more so than with the 720S. Spend time with this car and I challenge you not to be captivated by the crisp lines and execution of its panelwork, the extravagan­ce of the details, the weird and wonderful collar of an air channel around the cockpit. You may even grow to love the eye sockets, as I do now.

Sit in one and you’ll be even further enamoured. With nearly 360-degree vision thanks to the innovative see-through C-pillars, it’s easier to place in traffic than a BMW 3-series. It’s such an event to sit in as well: all exotic shapes and carefully selected materials, enveloped by a canopy straight off a fighter plane.

Once on the road you may ask yourself how it’s possible that it rides better than quite a few luxury GTs. Some, conversely, may also wonder why it’s a bit quiet, and sounds rather flat. The 720S propositio­n isn’t about theatrical­ity during the everyday – you’ll need a Lamborghin­i for that. But get past this and you’ll discover a car that’s everyday-biddable, but also that has another side to it that wants to tear your face off. You expect it to be staggering­ly fast, but what really leaves an impression is just how accessible the performanc­e is, and how easy it is to live with. The ride is good, you can see out of it and the driving position is as close to perfect as you’ll get. This is one very special car.

To truly understand what it’s like having 710bhp in a reasonably light car, you need to turn off all the elaborate electronic nannying and then accelerate at full force. It’s only then, with the rear Pirellis franticall­y battling to keep their purchase on the road, the hydraulica­lly assisted steering writhing subtly in your palms, and the motor headbuttin­g the limiter with a ferocity that never wanes, that you fully appreciate the true potency of this car; the kind of potency that equates to 0-160kmph in just over five-and-a-half seconds, and a lap-time second only to a P1 shod with Trofeo Rs. That alone makes it a worthy supercar of the year: factor-in all its other qualities and it’s nothing less than a game-changer.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­Y by ASTON PARROTT ??
PHOTOGRAPH­Y by ASTON PARROTT
 ??  ?? Above: Everywhere you look on the 720S, you find more details that captivate. Left: The way it combines civility with savagery is remarkable
Above: Everywhere you look on the 720S, you find more details that captivate. Left: The way it combines civility with savagery is remarkable
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