I didn’t plan it this way. I mean, I knew the Alfa would be arriving around the same time my previous long-term car was going away and I mounted a concerted lobbying campaign for the Giulia, but I didn’t spec it out. When I saw it, though, there was an immediate personal connection.
Generally, we’re assigned our long-term vehicles and it’s almost always our fleet manager, Erick Ayapana, who picks the trim and options depending on what the automaker has available. For the Giulia, he went with Misano Blue paint and silver five-spoke wheels. I never told him what Dad’s old car looked like, but I about did a double-take when I first saw the Giulia.
Dad had a number of cool cars over the years, starting with at ’60s Mustang he bought in the ’70s when no one wanted them anymore, then a Datsun 240Z when the Mustang proved unreliable. Around the time I showed up, he traded the Datsun for a Dodge Daytona Turbo. Red over silver with phone dial wheels, I loved that little coupe because I spent most of the time riding around in Mom’s Caravan. I’m fairly sure the boost gauge at the top of the center console is at least partly responsible for my love of cars.
Dad kept the Daytona well into the first few years of my younger brother’s life, but as we got bigger, climbing into the back seats became more and more of a hassle. The Daytona had to go, and despite my encouraging him to go for that new Mitsubishi 3000GT we looked at, a sedan was in order. Dad had seen the previews of the new-for-’92 Pontiac Grand Am and liked it enough to special-order one. See, Dad wanted a Grand Am GT with the high-output version of the Quad 4 engine and a five-speed manual, but he wanted it in a sedan and Pontiac just wasn’t building those yet. In the meantime, the Daytona was sold and Dad picked up a used Renault Alliance convertible to tide him over, which was the biggest automotive mistake he ever made (though a used Ford Ranger came close).
I tell this story because Dad’s Grand Am GT sedan was painted Bright Aqua Metallic with silver five-spoke alloy wheels. It’s not the exact same shade as Alfa’s Misano Blue, but it’s not far off. Dad took meticulous care of that old Pontiac, and it was in showroom condition the day he finally let it go. He liked to drive it a little quick on a back road, something else I’m sure stoked my interest in cars. He daily drove his pickup truck and reserved the Grand Am for special occasions. When I learned to drive, it was a treat to drive Dad’s car. He gave it to me a few years back when he retired and moved out of state, but I ended up selling it to pay some debts (plus, one of the shifter cables was going out and replacements are unobtainable).
The Giulia may not have much in common with the Grand Am aside from the color scheme and number of doors and cylinders, but I can’t help think of Dad’s car every time I look at it.
That isn’t the only personal connection, either. You wouldn’t know it from my name, but I’m half Sicilian—Gallucci on my mother’s side. I spent my honeymoon in northern Italy and even tried, briefly, to learn the language. It’s a country I’d move to in a heartbeat, or at least retire to. Alfa is native to northern Italy, though the Giulia is built at the Cassino plant in Piedimonte San Germano, halfway between Rome and Florence. As any Sicilian or Italian will gladly and loudly tell you, southern Italy is not Sicily and vice versa, but it’s close enough to feel special to me. Italian cars always felt exotic and unattainable to me when I was growing up, and I never thought back then I’d be driving one no matter the price. Fiat and Alfa returning to the U.S. got my heart racing with thoughts of Italian metal in a middle-class price range.
Layer those familial connections on top of a personal inclination toward underdogs and an abiding need to drive a car that handles well above all else, and it’s easy to see why I’m smitten with the Giulia. Of course, we can sometimes be too critical of the ones we love, and I’ve got a few critiques of the Giulia to air in a future update.
Read more on our long-term Alfa Romeo Giulia here:
The post 2018 Alfa Romeo Giulia Ti Sport Long-Term Update 1: The Personal Connection appeared first on Motor Trend.
from Motor Trend https://ift.tt/2LVqoqQ
No comments:
Post a Comment