The case for a smaller Defender has been clear for years, as product strategy types at Land Rover (is that still a valid name?) have known for more than a decade. But the advent of the latest full sized Defender four years ago has only made it stronger.
Main reasons: size and cost. Back in 1948, a Land Rover was 3.3metres long, considerably shorter than today’s Mini or a Fiat 500.
Even the longer wheelbase version that bobbed up after a few years was shorter than today’s Ford Focus. If off-road capability still concerns the modern creators of Defenders — and their care with electronic traction, ground clearance, hardware durability and tyre spec shows it does — then compactness is a big asset they can no longer use.
Back in the day, even a humble Freelander could do better than a Range Rover in some arduous conditions, because it was smaller. And stories abound of Suzuki Jimnys — and even Fiat Panda 4×4s — outdoing Defenders on grounds of weight and size. Drive today’s Defender on road and you’ll discover that in some common conditions, London’s suburban streets for instance, the current Defender is just too big.
If JLR wants its staple model to be relevant in the country’s major population areas, size matters. And especially width.
Second, it can’t be ideal that the cheapest of a family of off-roaders starts at £50,000-plus. Especially since it’ll be £60,000-plus in today’s money when compulsory EV models arrive. Leaves a yawning space for rivals, notably Chinese, to pile into your strongest markets at £25k less with products that do nearly as good a job.
Finally, there are the marketing concerns: today’s Defender is earmarked for a long life. What will stimulate interest in the putative Defender family over the next six years or so? Even Range Rover has support from Evoque. A small model is needed, and it’s already late.