Blending supercar pace with luxury saloon opulence, the gorgeous Ghiblis are finally getting the recognition they deserve
The dream of owning a Maserati Ghibli is one of those recurring exotic-car fantasies that I used to think might actually one day come true.
They were, after all, cheap for decades, moving from being a must-have fashion trinket of the playboy classes to irrelevant GT dinosaur in one easy move.
They are not even all that rare in exotica terms: 1295 cars in six years makes a Ghibli positively common compared to any Iso or Monteverdi you care to name.
In fact, the Ghibli was the most successful of the classic V8 Maseratis, and a curious case of a firm’s most expensive car also being its biggest seller.
And yet, even at its lowest financial ebb, the fast, beautiful and relatively abundant Maserati Ghibli was still somehow always priced just beyond the grasp of the likes of me.
I can’t moan, really, because I had my chance: the failure to capture a tired but otherwise respectable example 15 years ago (for £12k) certainly feels like one of my poorer fiscal decisions when you consider the £218,500 this beautiful SS coupé made at auction in September.