2020 McLaren Senna GTR: When Three Letters Actually Mean Something
McLaren doesn't hand out the GTR badge—they've only done it three times in 30 years, starting with the F1 GTR that won Le Mans outright. The Senna GTR is track-focused obsession: active aerodynamics, motorsport-derived suspension, and a 4.0L twin-turbo that doesn't need marketing speak. This is what happens when McLaren stops worrying about road manners and builds purely for the circuit.
GTR cars are rarely sold because owners actually track them. When one surfaces, you're not looking at depreciation—you're looking at validation.