drove

I drove the new Kia EV4 – it looks great, drives sweetly and everything is super easy – put simply it’s a peach

FIRST it was Mondeo. Then Fiesta. Now Focus. 

Another much-loved Ford heading for the great scrapyard in the sky

A blue Kia EV on a winding road with a blurred mountainous and coastal background.

6

Kia’s EV4 is a sleek five-door electric hatch from £35k that’s stylish and fun to driveCredit: Supplied
Blue Kia EV3 electric SUV driving on a winding road with trees.

6

The regular EV4 has a 273-mile ­battery and recharges in 30-minutesCredit: Supplied
A man driving a Kia car on a winding road with mountains in the background.

6

You sit nice and low in this car. We like that. It rides nicelyCredit: Supplied

No matter. 

Kia is here to fill the gap by giving us two sensibly-priced, Focus-sized family hatchbacks called “4”. 

One petrol. 

One electric. 

Plus, an electric saloon thingy. 

The same thing happened with small cars

Ford axed the cheery Ka runabout six years ago. Yet Kia is still shifting the dinky Picanto by the boatload. 

I dunno. Them crazy Koreans giving people what they actually want. 

Right, let’s discuss the cars you see on these pages today. 

The yellow car is called K4. That’s a five-door petrol hatch from £25k. Well-equipped. Fizzy 1-litre or 1.6 turbo petrols. Seven-year warranty. As with any Kia. Undercuts a Volkswagen Golf by £3k. 

EV6 Kia EV6 GT is a ridiculously fast SUV that even boils your kettle – but can it beat £158k Porsche 911 in drag race

The blue car is called EV4. That’s a five-door electric hatch from £35k, before any electric car grant. Looks great. Drives sweetly.

The chassis could easily handle more power. Iron Man and Mickey Mouse integrated in the onboard computer. 

I’m serious. 

You can personalise the central screen and satnav with your favourite movie characters. The kids will love that. 

Then watch Netflix or play arcade games, if you ever need to stop to recharge. 

I say IF because the biggest 81kWh battery will do 390 miles by the official WLTP test. Closer to 320 miles in the real world.

Still more than most people do in a week. And way more than a Vauxhall Astra Electric can manage. 

Everything is super easy 

The regular EV4 has a 273-mile ­battery and recharges in a 30-minute tea-and-pee break. 

Driving impressions. You sit nice and low in this car. We like that. It rides nicely (multi-link rear axle). 

We designed this car thinking about the European customer because they love to drive

Kia engineer

Handles nicely (also multi-link rear axle). Accelerates smoothly. Everything is super easy.

If you want to feel more involved, use the braking regen paddles on the steering wheel to mimic changing down gears for a bend. 

I reckon the four-wheel-drive GT due next year is going to be a lot of fun. 

A Kia engineer told me: “We designed this car thinking about the European customer because they love to drive.” 

Too right. 

The cabin is copy-and-paste Kia’s other award-winning EVs. Which means a nice mix of screens and hard controls, cup holders and chargers for everyone, lots of recycled materials, and lots of S P A C and E. 

Like 10cm more legroom in the back than a Tesla Model 3. Like a wide-opening boot that swallows loads more stuff than a Focus, Golf or Astra. 

That’s the benefit of a ground-up ­electric car. It’s no bigger on the outside. But you get a next-size-up cabin. 

Rear view of a yellow Kia K4 5DR hatchback parked outside a modern building.

6

The K4 is a five-door petrol hatch from £25k that’s well-equipped, zippy, and £3k cheaper than a GolfCredit: Supplied
Rear view of a grey Kia EV6 driving on a highway, with mountains in the background.

6

The fugly EV4 Fastback. I reckon the designers were rushing to get to the pubCredit: Supplied
A car infotainment screen displaying the Kia Europe interface with options like Voice memo, Relax mode, Weather, Calendar, Sports, and Valet mode, each represented by a Marvel superhero illustration.

6

You can personalise the central screen and satnav with your favourite movie charactersCredit: Supplied

Put simply, EV4 is a peach. 

Now for the car I’m less bothered about. The fugly EV4 Fastback. I reckon the designers were rushing to get to the pub. Either that or they finished it after they’d been to the pub. 

I’m sure someone will like it. 

It does have a bigger boot and the biggest battery as standard. 

But it costs £41k. 

At least Kia is doing Ford’s old job by giving everyone lots of choice. 

KEY FACTS: KIA EV4 

  • Price: £34,695 
  • Battery: 58kWh 
  • Power: 204hp 
  • 0-62mph: 7.5 secs 
  • Top speed: 105mph 
  • Range: 273 miles 
  • CO2: 0g/km 
  • Out: November 

Source link

Ex-Premier League star demands justice after losing millions in investment scandal that drove him to alcohol and drugs

FORMER Prem stars who lost tens of millions in failed investments are demanding justice.

TV pundit Danny Murphy, 48, said he was a victim of “financial abuse” — turning to booze, drugs and gambling after losing about £5million.

Danny Murphy on Match Of The Day.

2

TV pundit Danny Murphy said he was a victim of ‘financial abuse’ when he lost millions in a failed investmentCredit: BBC
Michael Thomas at the FA Cup legends parade.

2

Murphy is one of 11 stars, including ex-Arsenal ace Michael Thomas, above, calling for more protection from tax chargesCredit: Rex

He was among up to 200 players who invested with Kingsbridge Asset Management in the 1990s and 2000s.

It attracted up to £417million before failed ventures led to loss of homes and bankruptcy.

Investors were deemed to be “victims of crime” in a police investigation but are still being chased for millions in tax.

Murphy is one of 11 stars, including ex-Arsenal ace Michael Thomas, calling for more protection from tax charges.

David McKee and Kevin McMenamin, who ran Kingsbridge, denied wrongdoing on BBC’s Panorama last night.

Murphy said he feels “shame” over his involvement.

“It’s the shame, embarrassment and guilt of getting yourself in a position that you think you’re better than,” he said.

“I’ve lost four – maybe five – million, roughly.

“The financial abuse I’ve suffered has caused me monumental problems in my life.”

He added: “The financial abuse in football and the dark side of football, is something that has gone under the radar for too long.”

‘Early retirement for you-‘ – Danny Murphy makes cheeky comment to departing Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker

Source link

I drove the new Mazda 3 – it has a really clever engine, drives sweetly and is brimming with big-car kit

HAVE a guess what engine powers this little Mazda3.

Is it a cheery 1-litre three-pot similar to a Volkswagen Polo?

Red Mazda driving on a track.

4

The Mazda3 corners tidily, with good body control, and feels solid and safeCredit: Supplied
Man leaning on a railing looking at a red Mazda 3.

4

It has a 2.5-litre naturally aspirated petrolCredit: Supplied
Man driving a car.

4

The cabin also shows Mazda is on a mission to provide the highest quality for the moneyCredit: Supplied

A sweet 1.2-litre turbo à la Vauxhall Corsa?

Or even a 1.5-litre hybrid like a Toyota Yaris?

The answer is none of the above.

It is actually a 2.5-litre naturally aspirated petrol.

That’s a B-I-G lump for a little squirt.

Bigger than anything you’ll find in a Kia Sportage or Nissan Qashqai, come to think of it.

The reason being, Mazda has always dared to be different.

It doesn’t do “downsizing”. In other words using a smaller capacity engine and fitting a turbo to it.

It prefers “right-sizing”. Having the correct capacity engine for the job, so it is less stressed and more efficient.

Also, this new engine, combined with 48v mild hybrid tech, produces more torque lower down the rev range than the old 2-litre, improving real-world performance.

The Mazda3 the first in our new generation of cars

Cylinder-deactivation tech shuts down two cylinders under light loads, lowering CO2 and adding a smidge of mpg.

So it’s a really clever engine for a vehicle that’s aged well, drives sweetly and is brimming with big-car kit from £25k.

Slick six-speed manual or auto? I’d go manual. It’s one of the best in the business and an absolute joy to thread down a B-road.

Don’t get me wrong, this isn’t the fastest ride at the fairground but it corners tidily, with good body control, and feels solid and safe.

If you need 4WD, try a CX-30.

The cabin is another example of Mazda’s mission to provide the highest quality for the money.

Clarkson once said the Mazda3 is ‘probably the most amazing car on sale in Britain’

Head-up display, Apple CarPlay, Amazon Alexa and a reversing camera all come as standard. We like that.

We also like the skinny, leather-wrapped steering wheel, squishy elbow pads, chunky ­footrest, big cup holders, old-school ­volume and heating controls, and grab handles galore.

It’s almost like they know exactly what people want from a car.

Clarkson once said the Mazda3 is “probably the most amazing car on sale in Britain”.

A pint of Hawkstone Lager says he’ll like the 2025 version even more.

Man leaning on a barrier looking at a red Mazda 3.

4

Clarkson once said the Mazda3 is ‘probably the most amazing car on sale in Britain’Credit: Supplied

KEY FACTS: MAZDA3

  • Price: £27,530
  • Engine: 2.5-litre petrol
  • Power: 140hp
  • 0-62mph: 9.5 secs
  • Top speed: 128mph
  • Economy: 47mpg
  • CO2: 135g/km
  • Out: Now

Source link