This Is The 'Sporty And Athletic' Ford Puma Crossover

Ford has revived the Puma badge, but for a Fiesta-based compact crossover rather than a cute coupe
This Is The 'Sporty And Athletic' Ford Puma Crossover

The Ford Puma is back! The only trouble is, rather than being affixed to the rump of a pretty and affordable little coupe, the Puma badge is now being used for an all-new compact crossover. Because there aren’t enough of those already, you understand.

This latest lifted hatchback - which is described as “sporty and athletic” - sits on the same Ford B-car platform as the Fiesta and the Fiesta Active. The Puma seems to have a fair bit of overlap with the latter car, but it promises to be noticeably more practical.

Its 456-litres of boot space is class-leading, and it includes a special 80-litre lower ‘load box’. This part has a synthetic lining and a drain plug, making it easy to hose out if you’ve sullied it hashtaglifestyle gear like muddy hiking boots.

This Is The 'Sporty And Athletic' Ford Puma Crossover

It sits under a divider made from 100 per cent recycled paper, which can be folded flat against the rear seat bench if you’d need to load any particularly bulky items. Doing so should be nice and easy, as the Puma’s boot can be opened by merely waving your foot under the rear bumper - a segment first, Ford says.

Inside, the new Ford Puma closely follows the design of the Fiesta
Inside, the new Ford Puma closely follows the design of the Fiesta

From launch, only a 1.0-litre inline-three turbo engine will be available with two states of tune: 123bhp or 153bhp. As it happens, the output of the latter is identical to that of the old Ford Racing Puma.

Whichever version of the 1.0-litre lump you go for, it’ll be fitted with a 48-volt mild-hybrid system. This extends the functionality stop/start system, allowing you to coast to a stop below 10mph without using a drop of unleaded. It also compensates for turbo lag and gives a torque boost of up to 50 per cent at lower engine speeds.

This Is The 'Sporty And Athletic' Ford Puma Crossover

Later on, there’ll be a diesel with a seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox joining the two manual petrols. Who knows - Ford may even opt to stuff the Fiesta ST’s 1.5-litre inline-three unit at some point.

The new Puma is set to go on sale at the tail end of 2019 and will be built at the Ford Craiova Assembly Plant in Romania.

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Comments

Anonymous

Oh no

06/26/2019 - 08:11 |
0 | 0
Anonymous
06/26/2019 - 08:14 |
55 | 0
Syria-chan [Green Van Squad leader]

please no

06/26/2019 - 08:22 |
0 | 0
effisjens
06/26/2019 - 08:38 |
6 | 1
Simone

They should have called it with an another name

06/26/2019 - 08:42 |
17 | 0
RWB Dude

In reply to by Simone

Exactly

06/26/2019 - 11:56 |
0 | 0
Kyubi22B

In reply to by Simone

Ford Lynx

06/29/2019 - 15:59 |
1 | 0
Tomás Ribeiro (Audi is life)

The front looks absolutely hideous… Wtf was Ford thinking on?

06/26/2019 - 08:48 |
0 | 0

I was thinking something like what DRUGS was ford on!😂

06/28/2019 - 22:37 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Everybody else is doing it so why can’t Ford? I think it is OK for a tall hatchback and does not deserve the hate.

06/26/2019 - 09:04 |
1 | 5
RWB Dude

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

But named the Puma? Hell no

06/26/2019 - 17:19 |
1 | 0
Ben Anderson 1

So it’s a Fiesta, but ever so slightly taller.

What an absolute waste of metal…

06/26/2019 - 09:32 |
2 | 0
TheDriver 1

And the point of that is what…?

06/26/2019 - 09:42 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Is it me or does it look like a old puma that tries to hold in a massive fart

06/26/2019 - 10:24 |
0 | 0