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Alfa Romeo won’t sully the GTA name by putting it on the Stelvio

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Alfa Romeo began celebrating its 110th birthday by resurrecting the heritage-laced GTA nameplate on a track-happy evolution of the Giulia Quadrifoglio. Enthusiasts went wild when they heard the news, but the company warned it’s not about to put the GTA name on every model it makes just to capitalize on its popularity.

First launched in 1965, the GTA acronym has historically denoted a lighter version of an existing model developed with racing (or, at least, track use) in mind. The recently-unveiled Giulia GTA fits the bill; a Stelvio GTA wouldn’t, according to the company. Executives thought long and hard about it and ultimately ruled it out.

“GTA is an important name for Alfa Romeo. Frankly speaking, we had a meeting on a Stelvio GTA, but it’s just not in line with customer expectations. It has to be the best possible [on the track]. On the Stelvio, we have a higher center of gravity [than on the Giulia], so it won’t achieve the same goals,” said Fabio Migliavacca, the company’s product marketing boss, in a candid interview with British magazine Autocar.

His comments suggest the 505-horsepower Quadrifoglio model is as hot as the Stelvio will get in the foreseeable future. There’s no indication Alfa Romeo is planning to add a second sedan to its range — its next new model is widely believed to be a smaller crossover — so the GTA treatment will be limited to the Giulia (pictured).

This could explain why demand for the car and its two-seater GTAm counterpart has been exceptionally high. The stripped-out, 540-horsepower sedans are limited to 500 numbered units combined worldwide.

Alfa Romeo hasn’t started taking orders yet, and it had the misfortune of unveiling the model mere days before the Italian government imposed an ongoing national coronavirus quarantine, but it has received more expressions of interest than it has build slots. Migliavacca revealed a majority of the enthusiasts the firm has heard from prefer the more hardcore GTAm over the slightly softer GTA. It’s lighter, and consequently quicker around a track.

“A lot of people are raising their hands and saying, ‘I want to have one,’ ‘I want to have four,'” he said. “It’s truly an amazing reaction considering the timing.”

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