Essayer OR - Gratuit
Maserati MC20 Cielo
Evo UK
|December 2022
We've already raved about the coupe version, but what does the MC20 lose and gain in the process of shedding its top?
THEY'VE THOUGHT OF EVERYTHING. Sweated the details. Of course they have. Despite the connotations of the name Maserati - which range from impossibly mysterious glamour to characterful oddball to plain old-fashioned shoddy irrelevance, depending on your point of view - it's very obvious that the MC20 supercar and the new spider version, named MC20 Cielo, have been developed with engineering rigour, fully informed of rivals' strengths and weaknesses and with clear performance and dynamic targets. That's just the way it is in 2022. Even at Maserati. And yet, it doesn't feel like it for a second.
That doesn't mean that it's woefully off the pace. Not at all. The MC20 Cielo ('Sky' in Italian) is brutally fast, its carbon-fiber chassis is commendably stiff, it grips and turns with a lightfooted ease that can easily stand comparison with McLaren or Ferrari. It just doesn't feel built to chase or imitate. Instead it treads its own path with great success and provides a wonderful new dynamic experience that's reminiscent of cars as diverse as an Alpine A110, Bugatti EB110 and even the Ferrari F40, yet remains unique. From the chaos of Maserati's spectacularly volatile history, little threads of DNA have been weaved together and a new identity has emerged. I'm sure this was intentional. Agonised over, even. But the MC20 and now the Cielo seem such an organic, effortless project. Oh, it looks pretty good, too.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition December 2022 de Evo UK.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Evo UK
Evo UK
Skoda Superb Sleeper Edition
Sticking with supercars and turning Lotuses and Alpines invisible is all in a day's work for our subtle hot-rod
3 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
INSANE IN THE RAIN
When you're invited to drive the 1578bhp, 282mph, convertible Bugatti Mistral, the one thing you don't need is rain. But when it's the final outing for the legendary 8-litre, quad-turbo, W16 engine, you'd be mad not to
10 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
Alfa Romeo Stelvio Veloce
It's long been one of our favourite affordable SUVs. Now it's joining the evo fleet in facelifted form. Will it still be a hit?
3 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
BACK IN ANGER
BMW's M135 xDrive has found some much-needed focus with its new M Dynamic Pack, but is it enough to give it the edge over Mercedes-AMG's A35?
6 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
Mazda MX-5 RF 2.0 Homura
Our retractable hard-top long-termer meets its soft-top equivalent - which is peak MX-5 spec?
3 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
GREEN FLASH
Ferrari's 458 Speciale is simply one of the greatest driver's cars there's ever been. Can the new 296 Speciale possibly live up to the legend? Here's where we find out, on road and track
11 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
TRACTION REPLAY
With a staggering 701bhp, the 992.2-generation 911 Turbo S is the most powerful production 911 there's ever been. It also promises a return to the all-round brilliance of the best Turbos
9 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
Alpine A110 R Ultime
The A110 is going out with a 340bhp bang in the shape of the highly tuned, hardcore R Ultime. Unsurprisingly, the ultimate A110 looks right at home on the track, but how does it perform on the road? We find out
5 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
BMW M2 CS
The original M2 CS is a former evo Car of the Year. With more power, a more tightly honed chassis and a load more attitude, the new CS will be aiming to repeat the dose
6 mins
December 2025
Evo UK
AT THE SPEED OF LIGFHT
BAC is taking the Mono racing with the ultra-lightweight Mono Cup – and a road-legal version will follow. We test the Cup on track at Austria's Red Bull Ring
11 mins
December 2025
Translate
Change font size

