The Volkswagen Polo GTI is a mature hot hatch that hasn’t lost its sense of fun
Reifnitz is nestled deep in the Austrian Alps, its quiet streets dotted with quaint, hand-painted chalets. Nothing much happens here, apart from one weekend each summer, when the village is invaded by 100,000 Volkswagen fanatics. They come from all over Europe and beyond – filling the mountain air with the aroma of beer, bratwurst and burnouts. This is the world-famous Wörthersee Treffen.
The cars are mostly Golf GTIs, but anything with a VW or Audi badge is accepted. From concours classics to stripped-out road racers, slammed and stanced low-riders to daily-drivers, the whole spectrum of car culture is here. Many carmakers would distance themselves from such modified madness, but Volkswagen – to its credit – has embraced it. It has an official Wörthersee show stand stacked with new cars and branded merchandise, which this year hosted the world debut of the flagship Golf GTI TCR.
Whatever your views on rust-look wraps, gold-plated engines and pounding German techno, the Golf GTI is clearly more than just a car. It’s one of motoring’s few true icons: the archetypal hot hatchback and arguably still the best. So where does that leave its little brother?
The Polo GTI has always lived in the Golf’s shadow and, in recent years, has also struggled to outshine the Ford Fiesta ST. A new ST was launched earlier this year to rapturous acclaim – including in these pages – but Ford’s little firecracker isn’t for everyone. On the right roads, it’s a revelation: rabidly responsive and riotous good fun. Yet there are compromises to consider, not least the very firm ride. To quote the PR man from Volkswagen UK: “Imagine a graphic equaliser. The Polo is pitched bang in the middle – not too soft you’ll get bored, yet not so extreme you’ll get tired of it”.
True to this remit, the GTI doesn’t offer the heady, sugar-rush hit of the ST: its steering is slower, its responses more muted. However, the supple suspension is well suited to the UK’s rubbish roads, making for fast, fluid progress where a Fiesta might feel frenetic. And when you’re in traffic or just cruising – which, let’s face it, is probably 95 percent of the time – the Polo is undemanding without feeling inert.
Not that it’s lacking in performance. The ‘EA888’ 2.0-litre turbo engine also sees service in the Golf GTI and Golf R, albeit detuned to 200hp here. Zero to 62mph takes 6.7 seconds and top speed is nigh-on 150mph. There’s ample mid-range oomph and the exhaust pops on the over-run in Sport mode, but it lacks the fizzy character of some rivals. The three-cylinder Up GTI (the latest addition to Volkswagen’s GTI family) is leagues ahead for aural appeal.
The Polo isn’t shouty when it comes to aesthetics either. Spot the red go-faster stripe up front, low-key bodykit and 17-inch alloy wheels. There’s not an oversized spoiler or fake rear diffuser in sight. It looks, well, like a shrunken Golf, and I rather like that. Even if many of the Wörthersee faithful would beg to differ.
Interestingly, the overall dimensions of the five-door-only Polo are nearly identical to a Mk5 Golf from 2003, so it’s roomy enough to accommodate a family of four. The interior is as solidly Germanic as you’d hope and has the trademark GTI touches, including ‘Jacara’ tartan-look trim and sports seats. Our car had the upgraded £650 Discover Navigation media system, which looks smart and is straightforward to use. We’d pass on the red dashboard inserts pictured here, though. Too jazzy.
It may be in the middle of Volkswagen’s graphic equaliser, but the Polo doesn’t feel middle of the road. Granted, it’s more of a slow-burner than some, but that’s part of its charm. At present, all cars have a paddle-shift DSG auto gearbox, but I’d wait for the more involving manual version – due in early 2019. Just think twice before you gold-plate the engine.