We should no longer be surprised by the notion of a compact car with  big-sedan features and eye-popping fuel economy. New creations like  the Hyundai Elantra and Chevrolet Cruze have gone about making the  compact segment one of the most hotly contested arenas in the market,  rankling the chains of long-time fighters like the Honda Civic  and Toyota Corolla in the process. But while the Cruze and Elantra have  proven that big content can come in small packages with smaller price  tags, there’s a growing sense that the fun-to-fling small car may be on  its way out in favor of commuters that have inherited the soft-riding  genes of their bigger brethren.
In a way, the change was all but inevitable. Whereas the compact  segment once served up a cornucopia of rides that were low on power but  big on handling, the market has proven that above all else, buyers in  this neck of the woods want value. In an effort to pinch every last  copper cent, both Hyundai and Chevrolet have scrapped the independent  rear suspension in their respective compacts in favor of the  considerably cheaper torsion-beam design.
So when Ford announced that American buyers would finally be able to  get their hands on the global Focus, our ears perked up. The last  Euro-Focus had built a reputation for being a smart handler, and if this  latest version could make it across the pond without becoming too  watered down in the process, compact buyers would once again have a  vehicle that’s as fun to drive as it is responsible to own. Now we get  to find out if Ford pulled it off.
Source:Autoblog





