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“Quite frankly, the SRX never lived up to my personal expectations,” Cadillac engineer Larry Mihalko told me from the passenger seat of the 2017 Cadillac XT5 as we surged over the winding roads of Orange County’s Ortega Highway. “This was my chance for a do-over.” The SRX, Cadillac’s lone crossover, ceased production in January after years of respectable sales, giving way to the all-new XT5. Despite the outgoing car’s popularity, there was apparently a lot to change when the automaker set out to birth a fresh crossover.
“I’m being very honest with you,” Mihalko added. “I was never happy with the brake feel on [the SRX], it had too much pedal travel and not enough effectiveness. It didn’t have a European feel. It was a heavy car and it felt heavy. The fuel economy was not very rewarding…I didn’t think the car rode well enough. It was mediocre.” The XT5, Mihalko says, has corrected all these issues. It’s 292 pounds lighter, with about 3 inches more legroom in the rear seat and a fresh 3.6-liter, 310 horsepower V6 under the hood.
It might not even be fair to compare the two — the folks at Cadillac repeatedly said the XT5 has a “ground-up architecture” — but context can’t be ignored. The SRX was one of the company’s most commercially successful vehicles. It sold 100,000 units globally last year and represents a large, loyal customer base in a fiercely popular luxury crossover segment. As its successor, the XT5 is tasked with being modern enough to attract Cadillac’s newly coveted young buyer, but palatable enough to satisfy the hordes of SRX owners. The car, along with the lightweight, modern CT6, is the latest compelling play in the automaker’s post-bailout rebrand. As Cadillac President Johan de Nysschen said, “We’ve found our energy again.” Case in point: the XT5 was first revealed to the public during New York Fashion Week, dangling below a helicopter, awash in floodlights as it hovered in front of a west-side warehouse party. Video of the stunt features plodding electro, good-looking twentysomethings and high-fashion flair. The message is clear: Cadillac is no longer the same brand that made the floaty front-wheel-drive Seville in the ’80s or the bland Catera in the ’90s.
2017 Cadillac XT5

Engine: 3.6-liter V6
Transmission: 8-speed Automatic
Horsepower: 310
Torque: 270 lb-ft
0-60 mph: 6.7 seconds (est.)
MPG: 19/27, city/highway
MSRP: $62,500 (as tested)