I had learned to drive in VW vans, drove some beetles and my 60 Plymouth Suburban wagon, when at age 16 I got to drive a 1953 xk120 with a freshly restored drive train.
It had a surprising amount of body roll; I suspect that the suspension hadn't been addressed yet. Still, amazing balance in turns, and oh, that engine!
We got on the interstate coming home, and as I pulled out onto the highway from the entrance ramp, the owner said, "Leave it in third." The faster it went, it seemed like the harder it pulled.
I few years later I drove a 69 Plymouth GTX, 440 six pack, 4 speed. Burned an entire tank of gas in two hours, without even hammering the throttle. At least not very many times.
I expected it to have a lot of torque, but it really was a beast.
I had a 79 LTD (the first year panther) that I drove my last year on the horse track, all through college and vet school, and for another 3 years. I went through a couple of builds, ended up with a 302 with ported E7 heads, Holly carb, Edelbrock intake, comp cam, crane roller rockers, headman headers, and a built C4 with a wide ratio gear set.
I junkyard scrounged the P71 suspension parts and speedometer, had it painted and installed some bucket seats from a cougar. I thought it was pretty good, for what it was.
Then I bought an actual P71. It was a 95 so I jumped forward a lot on the engineering. The old LTD would flatten off after 100, even with the built engine, but the 95 would pull way beyond where I was willing to go.
My next trip to the auction, I met a mechanic from thge county, turned out that it was the car the Sheriff's department used as their "chase car." I had wondered why they were replacing the tires every 8,000 miles.
Finally, I have to agree with some of the other posts... Miata.