While not impossible, a fourth Leon Cupra R seems unlikely now. Maybe something will be spun off whatever the Golf ‘R350’ becomes, and maybe Cupra will renew its interest in Nurburgring lap times with the demise of the Civic Type R, but none of that really seems what the brand is keen on right now. Hard to argue with the business sense: look how many bronze-accented Atecas, Brembo-braked Formentors and Atacama Desert Tavascans are out there now. Making SUVs is far more lucrative than limited-run hot hatches, however much we’d like to pretend otherwise.
The previous Cupra R was a real cult classic, an example of how to do it well. Offered as an estate (with £500, 350hp Abt upgrade possible) or super serious - Cup 2 tyres, manual only, 24 RHD units - hatchback, it was quite some sign off for Seat-badged Cupras. Since then, the model has been a very decent hot hatch, albeit without the sort of enthusiast concessions that made previous ones so likeable: no fun colours, no manual gearboxes, no option packs called ‘Sub8 Ultimate’. Cupra’s a bit too cool for all that nowadays. Or likes to think it is.
The success of Cupra R Leons has always been pretty simple: more power, more swagger, not much more money. The second car offered 265hp for one very busy front axle as far back as 2009 for just £23k. It also featured a colour catalogue copied straight from Stabilo Boss, which was great.
And before that, of course, was this Leon, the original Cupra R. The very first Leon Cupra, launched at the end of the 20th century, arrived just in time for the hot hatch’s renaissance and was perfectly pitched: faster than a Golf GTI, better looking anything with five doors had any right to be (thanks Giugiaro), and not much more than £15k - perfect. A few years later came a 210hp Cupra R, with its handsome new wheels and bodykit, then, because hot hatches were a big deal 20-odd years ago, the 225hp Cupra R. The one with the BAM engine, the one everyone wants.
And here is a Cupra R 225, owned by just two keepers over 22 years (they were neighbours, one bought it from the other in 2006), and showing just 44,000 miles. It really feels like one of those cars that’s fallen off the radar a little, never with the following of GTIs or the more exhilarating hatches of the time but with plenty still to recommend it. Even in grey, even pictured next to Transits, a Cupra R looks fantastic.
In the near two decades it’s been with its current owner, the Leon has only been used for longer trips and kept in a garage; so it’s free from scrapes or, really, much wear at all. A proper unmodified gem, basically, even if it will want a cambelt as soon as possible. Something to factor into an offer, perhaps. The benefit of not having GTI heritage is not having a GTI price tag: the Cupra R is for sale at £10,990. An ideal distraction from no new hot hatches, surely.
SPECIFICATION | SEAT LEON CUPRA R
Engine: 1,781cc, four-cyl turbo
Transmission: 6-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 225@5,900rpm
Torque (lb ft): 207@2,200-5,500rpm
MPG: 32.5
CO2: 211g/km
First registered: 2003
Recorded mileage: 44,190
Price new: £16,995 (2002)
Yours for: £10,990
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