Welcome to the 35th running of our annual Britain's Best Driver's Car contest, which, as you may know, we refer to by its Auto car office code name of Handling Day.Because that's how it started out: a day of testing cars' handling on a circuit.
The format has since been honed into one that most accurately guides us towards a great driver's car: three days of driving, one spent on great roads and two at a great race track. It gives us the time and the space to get to know the cars inside and out and explore their limit handling. A number of places will do it, but Wales and Anglesey tend to do it best, so we're back.
It's worth remembering, too, that these are the 10 best sports cars of the year plus last year's winner (of a fashion, but we'll get to that in a moment). There isn't a duffer among them. So if a car finishes 11th here, it would still end up top of most group tests in which it might find itself. Perhaps the question, then, is: if our daily commute happened to involve a few laps of a circuit followed by 30 miles of twisting, challenging open roads, which of these cars would we drive most over the next 12 months?
To decide, we take five experienced testers (Matt Saunders having been called away to test a 1000bhp Lamborghini), each of whom has up to 50 points to allocate per car, scoring for how much fun a car is on road and track. Then we tot up the results and declare a winner.
Before we continue, a quick word on the Porsche 911 GT3, which has won the past two BBDC contests. As is very occasionally the way, a winning car gets superseded or overwhelmed by other cars in its range: the GT3 RS and Dakar are new in the past year, both deserve a spot and we can hardly have three 911s in the line-up...
This story is from the November 01, 2023 edition of Autocar UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November 01, 2023 edition of Autocar UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
THE ONE WHEN PEUGEOT GOT ITS SUPERMINI MOJO BACK
The 208 marked a return to form for a maker renowned for its small cars
READY TO TOFF
Gordon Murray's grand new HQ is now nearing completion, with T50 production already in full swing. MATT PRIOR and STEVE CROPLEY drop by and go for a ride
This humble chip will change cars forever
Nvidia, the £2.7 trillion US tech giant behind it, has the power to shape motoring's intelligent future. JAMES ATTWOOD learns how
MERCEDES-BENZ V-CLASS
Interior upgrades make the MPV worthy of shuttling Merc's CEO himself
Sharing is caring
One successful motor trader has opened up his car collection for the benefit of his home town.JOHN EVANS meets him
When trains would take your car across the UK
The Channel Tunnel's Le Shuttle service is a marvel, saving drivers hassle and several hours on a ferry, and even after 30 years it's still something of a novelty to drive your car onto a train carriage.
MG ZS
Dacia Duster-chasing crossover joins MG's hybrid powertrain push
LAND ROVER DEFENDER OCTA
It's a 4x4 that thinks it's a supercar. But does this 627bhp V8 flagship offer the best of both worlds or just compromise each for the other?
Matt Prior
To nobody's great surprise, the other day the Renault 5 and Alpine A290 jointly won the 2025 Car of the Year award (the original and still the best of the big international car awards thingies).
DS WANTS TO BECOME 'LOUIS VUITTON OF CAR INDUSTRY'
It's aiming to follow Bentley into the luxury space, says design director