Hold the funeral cortège for now, petrolheads, and acknowledge the Blue Oval as your saviour: the Ford Mustang, returning for a seventh generation, is now the only car on sale in Europe with a V8 and a manual gearbox.
That alone is worthy of commendation, but this pony is far from the last nag left in the stable.
How has Ford done it in a world of booming crossover sales, hybrid this and EV that?
Today, the Ford Mustang GT is the only car on sale in Europe with a V8 and a manual gearbox
It doesn’t take an industry insider to spot that this car owes a lot to its predecessor.
The bodywork and interior are different, but the Coyote V8, now the UK’s only engine option, has barely changed, and the underpinnings beneath the fresh styling are hardly revolutionary.
There are changes, though, such as the two large screens ahead of the driver instead of a traditional dash.
The bigger, 13.2in central display is a welcome addition: it’s slick and sharp, but we’d rather a few more of the climate controls had remained as buttons.
The new Ford Mustang GT is a grown-up pony car that can rival the likes of Mercedes-Benz and BMW