The lion does not concern himself with the opinions of sheep, a cunning father once grunted angrily to his ne’er-do-well scion. For some reason the words echo in my head as we climb sheer Italian mountain roads, furiously working the F1-inspired, eight-speed/dual-clutch paddles like a PS5 controller.
And while Tywin Lannister may have been discussing the diabolical machinations of Game of Thrones while he cleaned a freshly killed stag with surgeon-like precision, the words now seem to take on a stronger meaning—a direct result of gripping the wheel of Ferrari’s latest ode to über-performance: the Purosangue.
Because we’re not just passing luxury SUVs on the Dolomites as if they’re standing still, we’re doing it as we zoom uphill—making short work of Porsche Macans and Audi Q5s as we climb some of the steepest mountains known to man.
There’s an embarrassment of riches to fall hard for with the Purosangue. Ferrari’s first lifted performance crossover—don’t dare call it a “Sports Utility Vehicle,” or face the admonishment of Maranello’s execs—boasts two singular elements that particularly shine in these harrowing circumstances, and a third when you arrive wherever you’re going. No doubt the reason Ferrari flew us all the way here to these unique roads to experience it all first-hand.
First the most salient: under the long hood before us the furious explosions of a Ferrari-crafted V-12 engine load power up like an earthmover. The 6.5-liter naturally aspirated powerplant could very well be one of Maranello’s last blazing a dozen cylinders, and it’s been tweaked to boast a ludicrous amount of pull from nearly zero— unloading 80% of its torque from only 2,100 rpms.
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