Mazda 6 Tourer Sport review: Arrive in this and you feel special
I’m not a fan of red cars as a rule, but Mazda’s new one is the best colour I’ve ever seen on the road and a real head-turner.
When I was growing up, everything was in black and white: the weather, the moon landings, my photo album, policemen, my television and everything on it. But on the road things were different. It was a rainbow nation. Your Ford Cortina was orange or green, and your neighbour’s Hillman Minx was scarlet. Your office car park was more vivid than a Jimi Hendrix album cover, and Arthur Daley was tooling around in a yellow Jaguar – OK, it was a Daimler Sovereign. No one buys a yellow Jag these days. No one buys anything yellow.
I don’t know when this happened, but we have arrived at a point where the only colour anyone chooses for their car is grey. If you look at the online configurator for the Range Rover, you will see that many colours are on offer but all of them aren’t actually colours at all. There’s Carpathian Grey, Bosphorus Grey, Windward Grey, Scafell Grey, Corris Grey and Byron Blue. Which is grey.
It may have something to do with a perceived notion that a coloured car is harder to sell. People have an opinion about lemon-zest yellow in a way they don’t about grey. All of which brings me to the Mazda6 Tourer. It’s available in white, black, grey, grey, grey, grey and grey. In any of those non-colours I wouldn’t have bothered organising a road test. However, it is also available in Soul Red Crystal, and this is the best colour I’ve seen on any car.
I’m not a fan of red cars as a rule. My Range Rover is grey, as was the Volkswagen Golf GTI that preceded it. And the Lamborghini Gallardo before that. I think having a red car marks you out as weird: it’s like having a moustache. You’re hiding something. But Soul Red Crystal is mesmerising. And because Mazda has been skilful with its use of chrome, this simply does not look like a humdrum family estate. You arrive in it and you feel special.
But what about the bit before you arrive? The journey? Well, the version I tested was the top-of-the-range 2.5-litre GT Sport Nav+. It does indeed have a sat nav and a million other things besides: a 360-degree camera, a light on the dashboard that suggests a cup of coffee when you’re tired, ventilated seats. You’d struggle to find anything in a Mercedes S-Class you don’t get in a Mazda6. Except perhaps headroom.
Getting through the door does require a bit of human origami, but once you’re there, all is well. Very well in fact. Mazda has been as skilful with materials on the inside as with the chrome on the outside; you really do feel as if you’re in a Faberge egg. Truly, there’s no way you’d guess the car I was driving cost $33,790. It feels like bloody good value. To drive? Well, it’s unlucky. I was sitting in it, outside a shop, when an elderly gentleman drove into the back of it. He then decided to attempt a reverse-parallel-parking manoeuvre and drove into it again. Other than that, though, it’s fine.
Mazda introduced the 2.5-litre engine fairly recently, and it’s easy to see why. It figures that, with diesel on the way out, it needs to offer customers as many petrol-unit choices as possible. But it may have gone too far with this one. It’s not a bad engine, by any means, but the fact is the 2.0-litre version gives you nearly all of the oomph without the fuel-consumption hit. That’s possibly the most sensible thing I’ve said in a road test, but it’s what happens to you in a car such as this. You feel like your dad. I have a Mazda6 and now I’m going to join a bowling club. Then I shall buy a pipe and worry about fuel economy.
The fact is the Mazda and its chief rivals – the Ford Mondeo and the VW Passat – are seen as worthy and dull. People would rather buy an SUV of some sort. Nobody wants a four-door saloon with a low-rent badge on the back. Not even if it’s a five-door estate version, looks nice and has tons of standard equipment. But I’m willing to bet that when you see the Soul Red Crystal paintwork, you’ll be sorely tempted.
Mazda 6 Tourer Sport
Engine: 2.5-litre petrol four-cylinder (140kW/252Nm)
Average fuel 7.0 litres per 100km
Transmission: Six-speed automatic, front-wheel drive
Price: $33,790
Rating: Three out of five stars