Toronto Star

Cadillac rises above driving school standard

About 25% of eligible owners taking advantage of chance to explore limits of their vehicle

- BENJAMIN HUNTING AUTOGUIDE.COM

There’s no shortage of driving schools available to those who want to learn how to properly exercise their high-performanc­e machinery beyond what’s possible within the confines of public roads and/or public decency.

They range from locally organized track schools to nationally recognized and, in some cases, franchised programs, each of which promises their students varying degrees of behind-the-wheel proficienc­y at the end of their respective curriculum­s.

Not all can deliver. There are a great many challenges associated with helping students become better drivers, not the least of which being the surprising­ly diverse range of opinions regarding what techniques and conceptual approaches lead to the quickest lap times.

Developing a truly consistent program, and then putting together a team that wholeheart­edly buys into its core tenets, is typically beyond the scope of weekend high-performanc­e driving events or, in some cases, even bigger budget operations.

I’ve spent the past 10 years bouncing from one school to another, working my way through autocross, street survival, road course and time trial classrooms and pit lanes in a bid to evolve as a driver. During that time, I’ve yet to encounter a program as philosophi­cally cohesive and wellexecut­ed as the Cadillac V Performanc­e Academy, which operates out of Spring Mountain Motorsport­s Ranch in Pahrump, Nev.

Only a year old, under the attentive eye of program lead Rick Malone, the V Performanc­e Academy has been welcoming 60 Cadillac owners a month (a dozen at a time) for two days of classroom and on-track instructio­n in both the CTS-V and ATS-V, the brand’s flagship sports cars.

Offered free of charge to American V owners (and available to Canadian owners as well as anyone willing to open up their wallets), a full 25 per cent of eligible Cadillac customers have so far taken advantage of this unique opportunit­y to explore the limits of their vehicles.

Spring Mountain is no stranger to partnershi­ps with General Motors, as the facility also hosts the Ron Fellows Corvette driving school and is the frequent site of media launches and other special events for Chevrolet and Cadillac. Sitting on thousands of acres of land roughly an hour outside of Las Vegas, the Ranch already offers the longest continuous race track in North America and is on course to expand to more than 24 kilometres of paved circuit over the next few years.

There’s nothing unique about an automaker associatin­g itself with a driving school, particular­ly for in-house performanc­e brands such as Cadillac’s V, with Ford doing the same thing for buyers of the Raptor and Focus ST, and FCA’s SRT partnering with the Bob Bondurant school in Arizona. Mercedes-Benz and Audi even have travelling schools that move across the continent from track to track in order to convenienc­e owners.

Setting Cadillac apart, however, are a number of details that dramatical­ly improve the entire school experience. The first is the facility itself. After being picked up at the airport by a private shuttle, each participan­t is given on-track accommodat­ions — as in, a luxury condo built within a few feet of the racing surface — for the duration of the program. For two full days, students wake up and then eat, drive and sleep at the track, fully immersing themselves in the academy environmen­t. There is no other program in the U.S. that delivers this type of end-to-end package for participan­ts.

Even more importantl­y, as I mentioned earlier, the V Performanc­e Academy has managed to develop an approach to sharing the collective knowledge of its instructor­s that surpasses any previous experience I’ve had as a student of the apex.

By alternatin­g classroom sessions and video demonstrat­ions with track time and focused driving exercises, the academy is able to clearly and logically build the skill levels of its students within the gradual framework of the school’s guiding principles.

I truly believe you can learn something about driving — regardless of your experience level — each and every time you open your mind to someone else’s perspectiv­e on what makes a fast lap.

Over the course of two days at Spring Mountain, I had several of my own habits and preconcept­ions about what works and what doesn’t on a race track consistent­ly challenged by the academy’s group of instructor­s, each of whom was fully committed to the potential presented by trail-braking (or light brakebalan­cing into a corner).

There’s no patent on trail-braking, of course, but the V Performanc­e Academy’s willingnes­s to stand behind this driving style in the face of the many other schools and driving gurus who advocate late-braking in a straight line is unusual and commendabl­e. More importantl­y, each discussion I had with an instructor, whether in the classroom or less formally one-on-one or in a small group immediatel­y after a track session, was done in an absolutely profession­al, positive and enthusiast­ic manner. Again, a marked contrast to what one will discover when making awide survey of performanc­e driving education programs.

In a world where branding has largely replaced substance, especially when considerin­g luxury automobile­s, it would have been easy for Cadillac to throw together a singleday, fly-in-and-out driving school where the basics of how not to swap ends in your 650 horsepower supersedan would be presented by a gaggle of disinteres­ted former racers eager to get that rubber-stamped certificat­e of participat­ion in your hand by the end of the afternoon. Instead, the V Performanc­e Academy distinguis­hes itself among its peers as being one of the most profession­al and focused organizati­ons dedicated to making you better, faster and stronger on both the street and the track.

 ?? BENJAMIN HUNTING/AUTOGUIDE.COM ?? The V Performanc­e Academy has been welcoming 60 Cadillac owners a month for two days of classroom and on-track instructio­n in both the CTS-V and ATS-V, the brand’s flagship sports cars.
BENJAMIN HUNTING/AUTOGUIDE.COM The V Performanc­e Academy has been welcoming 60 Cadillac owners a month for two days of classroom and on-track instructio­n in both the CTS-V and ATS-V, the brand’s flagship sports cars.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada