The Mercury News

Ute smackdown! VW Atlas Cross Sport vs. Chevy Blazer

- By Henry Payne

I recently tested the all-wheel drive of the Volks Wagon Atlas Sport and the Chevy Blazer in the northern latitudes of Michigan (Blazer) and the Pacific Northwest (Atlas Cross Sport).

With its toned, tightly engineered bod, the Blazer felt like a German sprinter begging me to exit the city and find some country curves. On the other hand, I might have mistaken the big, square Atlas as a GMC product were it not for the oval VW logo planted on its kisser. This Americanbu­ilt German is less interested in carving apexes than packing all your belongings in back for a weekend Up North.

Exhibit A of the SUV revolution which now make up 53% of vehicle sales is the explosion of its mid-size class.

Middie SUVS were once a boutique segment. Long dominated by the Jeep Grand Cherokee, it offered a stylish refuge for empty-nesters who still coveted the size of a three-row family ute but with more design appeal. Want something else? The high-tech Ford Edge, Subaru Outback and funky Nissan Murano were also available.

Other SUV segments grew like wildfire three-rows, compacts, subcompact­s, even a subcompact tweener segment squeezed between subcompact­s and compacts. So it seemed inevitable the midsize ute segment would grow. In the last couple years we’ve gotten the Honda Passport, Chevy Trailblaze­r, remade Hyundai Santa Fe and now the VW Atlas Cross Sport.

As our Chevy and VW testers suggest, the entries are surprising­ly diverse in their approach.

Cross Sport gambles that shoppers want more room than zoom. And so, like the Pilot-derived Honda Passport, it has taken its gigantic three-row architectu­re and simply lopped off the third row. The Blazer, meanwhile, has no three-row variant and aims for style like the Edge and Murano. The Santa Fe/outback are comparativ­e wallflower­s but do their thing with the best value-plays in class.

You know Blazer’s intentions from its ubiquitous TV ad in which a hip mom takes one look at the RS model and exclaims: “This is my sexy-mom car.”

Blazer looks the part. It’s fashionabl­y dressed in swoopy lines, floating roof and intimidati­ng grille. European it may appear, but in truth it’s homegrown an attempt to bring Camaro style to SUV. I like the effort though it can all be a little too much (an issue with Camaro as well).

The ginormous Cross Sport, meanwhile, is quite conservati­ve though its fastback allows a sleeker look than its three-row Atlas sibling.

The real contrast is inside. Blazer imports Camaro cues to make the best-looking interior in class: aviator climate controls (ooooh, turn their rims to adjust the temp), tablet-like infotainme­nt screen, sporty gauges. All this, and console cubby space, too.

The Cross Sport looks like a Chevy Silverado with acres of blocky, black space. I pined for the two-tone brownand-black interior just to break up the yards of black plastic. There’s little imaginatio­n here, but loads of trucklike storage space top of dash, behind the shifter, in the deep console box.

Both Blazer and Cross Sport offer backseat living rooms. Your 6-foot-5 reviewer was comfortabl­e fore and aft. Need more cargo room? Flatten the second rows. It’s the cargo hold where you really feel the VW’S 4.5-inch wheelbase advantage translatin­g into near-class-best 40 cubic feet of storage space vs. the Blazer’s 30.

The Tennessee-born VW speaks with more of an American accent these days, and it understand­s our craving for standard features. Blindspot-assist and remote app come standard, and my $42,000 tester was loaded with adaptive cruise-control, heated steering wheel and panoramic roof.

In another “Freaky Friday” moment, the Blazer feels Old Europe by skimping on standard features most notably adaptive cruise-control (which comes standard on a $28,000 Outback). My $41,000 Blazer went begging, however and you’d have to buy premium trims starting at $48,000 to get it standard.

The Blazer’s sex appeal doesn’t stop at the drafting board. This is one gymtoned ute.

Chevy has made handling a priority in its lineup from the hot-rod Silverado pickup to the Equinox SUV. The Blazer is no different. Like its siblings, Blazer boasts a nimble chassis that’s genuinely fun to drive.

The only thing sporty about the Cross Sport is its name. VW fans hoping the hot-hatch Golf R’s handling translates to brother ute will be disappoint­ed. If you want a fun, allwheel-drive VW for $42,000, buy the sensationa­l Golf R or, better yet, the stunning, hatchback Arteon sedan, which you’ve never heard of because we Yanks are so star-struck with SUVS. But I digress.

Through Oakland County’s twisties, the Blazer felt a class smaller thanks to its tuned suspension and smooth tranny. I took the Cross Sport on writhing mountain passes north of Vancouver, British Columbia, and ... aw, fuhgeddabo­udit.

Both the Cross Sport and Blazer are optioned with V-6s, but the added oomph is lost on the porky Atlas. Stick with the peppy 235-horse turbo-4 (shared with the Golf GTI). Despite similar specs as Chevy’s four-cylinder, the VW’S four is better with a tidy eight-speed transmissi­on (now, that’s European!), which smoothly propelled the big ute through the rev range.

The Blazer’s V-6 option, meanwhile, comes with a whopping 32 more ponies than the Cross Sport, complement­ing its athletic intentions. Sure, the V-6 option is a big step up in price to the $45,000 RS model. But the sexy-mom RS is hot. Cross Sport’s similar R-design trim was barely noticeable on the $52,000 SEL Premium trim I drove.

“What’s different about America is all the choices you have,” said VW North American product chief Serban Boldea as we lounged in a Cross Sport’s huge lobby er, seats.

That choice now extends to mid-size utes. Check out your local dealer for “Freaky Friday” deals.

2020 Volkswagen Atlas Cross Sport Vehicle type: Front-engine, frontand all-wheel drive, 5-passenger SUV

Price: $31,565, including $1,020 destinatio­n charge ($42,700 AWD SEL turbo-4 and $51,445 AWD SEL Premium R-line V-6 as tested)

Powerplant: 2.0-liter turbo-4; 3.6-liter V-6

Power: 235 horsepower, 258 poundfeet torque (turbo-4); 276 horsepower, 266 pound-feet torque (V-6)

Transmissi­on: 8-speed automatic

Performanc­e: 0-60 mph, NA; 2,000-5,000 lbs.

Weight: 4,288-4,411 lbs.

Fuel economy: EPA 18 city/23 highway/20 combined (AWD turbo-4); 16 city/22 highway/19 combined (AWD V-6)

REPORT CARD

Highs: Bold looks; roomy interior/ cargo

Lows: Uninspired interior; no VW hot-hatch DNA

Overall: 3 stars

2020 Chevrolet Blazer

Vehicle type: Front-engine, frontand all-wheel drive, 5-passenger SUV

Price: $29,995, including $1,195 destinatio­n charge ($41,595 AWD 3LT turbo-4 as tested)

Powerplant: 2.5-liter 4-cylinder; 2.0-liter turbo-4; 3.6-liter V-6

Power: 193 horsepower, 188 pound-feet torque (2.5L 4-cyl); 230 horsepower, 258 pound-feet torque (2.0-liter turbo-4); 308 horsepower, 270 pound-feet torque (V-6)

Transmissi­on: 9-speed automatic

Performanc­e: 0-60 mph, NA for turbo-4; 6.3 sec. for V-6 (Car and Driver); towing NA for turbo-4, 4,500 lbs. (V-6)

Weight: 3,810-4,246 lbs.

Fuel economy: EPA 22 city/27 highway/24 combined (2.5L 4-cyl); 21 city/28 highway/24 combined (AWD 2.0-liter turbo-4); 18 city/25 highway/21 combined (V-6)

REPORT CARD

Highs: Stylish, roomy interior; tight handling

Lows: Skimpy on some standard features; can get pricey

Overall: 3 stars

ABOUT THE WRITER

Henry Payne is auto critic for The Detroit News. Find him at hpayne@ detroitnew­s.com or Twitter @ Henryepayn­e.

 ??  ?? The 2020 Ford Expedition 4x2 Platinum Edition SUV. Photo courtesy of Ford Internet Media.
The 2020 Ford Expedition 4x2 Platinum Edition SUV. Photo courtesy of Ford Internet Media.

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