As I write, it’s the absolute bleakest of the bleak midwinter. My study is as cold as my shed and I’m peering out of a drizzle-slicked window at a rather dour, dark grey hatchback that’s coated in a thick film of salt and road slime.
Yet I’m feeling atypically upbeat. The weather is as wet as my January was dry, the sense of freshness that comes with the new year all but dissipated and the prevailing atmosphere rather sombre on the whole, but I’ve got to drive up to Solihull tomorrow, and I couldn’t be happier about it.
Usually, the prospect of schlepping from my south London pad to the West Midlands would have me frantically calculating the possibility of catching a train (or, better yet, some cataclysmic winter bug). And at this time of year, when I will leave under cover of darkness, encounter axle-shattering potholes and risk being sideswiped by sprayblinded motorway meanderers? Driving simply doesn’t get any less appealing.
But I’ve got a Mini Cooper S to play with, so I’ve spent the morning planning a nice, twisty route that runs parallel to the M25 and M40 and freeing up my diary so I can spend an extra hour on the road.

Already, even after just a couple of spirited blasts, it’s proving to be among the least compromised ‘fun cars’ I’ve daily-driven, which is to say it’s punchy and engaging without being unduly uncomfortable or catastrophically thirsty. It’s incentivising without being intimidating.
I will give a more nuanced account of its dynamic character once I’ve fully got under its skin, but suffice to say, for now, that the age-old formula of cramming 200bhp-plus of whooshing turbo grunt into the shell of a school-running, supermarket-bothering hatchback is one that holds enduring appeal.








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I own an R53 Cooper S (supercharged 1.6). I bought it when it was cheap -- now here in Italy it's becoming a rather sought-after model though. I was able to choose such car because I work from home and don't have to use it daily. It's impractical and uncomfortable (firm setup, terrible secondary ride, unable to smooth out bumps and road imperfections), its fuel consumption is in the region of 23 mpg and it's a rather unreliable car although it's durable (reliability and durability are rather different concepts). Despite this, I don't regret choosing a Mini Cooper S. Of course, it's a choice made much more with the heart than with rationality, yet when you sit behind the wheel, you feel like you're driving a special car, something different from the ordinary. And on the right stretch of road -traffic permitting- it's so much fun it puts a big smile on your face. But fuel economy aside, what I said about the spirit with which one chooses a Mini also applies to those who buy an F65/F66 today. Those who choose one tend to forgive even its obvious flaws. By and large, the Mini Cooper's DNA is still the same, and it's not a car you buy rationally. After all, when it comes to cars, personality is often the flip side of a flaw. What I don't like about the F65/F66 generation is the lack of a manual transmission option. It's also not nice to have to opt for the tacky JCW trim to have paddle shifters behind the steering wheel. Furthermore, I have serious reservations about the round touchscreen that replaced the physical switchgear. I also think that, compared to the R50/R53 and R56 generations, the look of the Mini Cooper has lost something in terms of grace and proportions due to a platform shared with other BMW models.