The first really quick car I ever drove in my career as a car writer was a car very much like the Audi S5 Sportback. As a matter of fact, it was an Audi S4 — the more traditional-looking twin of this Sportback — equipped with a dual-clutch gearbox and a 329-horsepower supercharged V6 — and to my young self, it felt insanely rapid and absolutely brilliant.
This was back in 2010, however, when Audi was just launching the predecessor generation to the B9-generation A4/A5/S4/S5 you came here to read about. 12 years may feel like an eternity in the automotive world — at least, the 12 particular years between then and now certainly does — but Audi’s compact sport sedan duo hasn’t changed all that much in that time. There’s still a forced-induction V6 under the hood, although it’s gone from a supercharged to turbocharged; it still, of course, boasts all-wheel-drive; and while the interior has evolved, today’s car still feels closely related to that one from more than a decade ago inside, from the design and layout of the radio to the pebbled leather of the three-point steering wheel.
So here, a dozen years and one and a half generations of car later, I find myself once again piloting a compact Audi sport sedan around New York City. And, as it turns out, even scrubbed clean of nostalgia, it’s a damn nice car.
The S5 Sportback is just powerful enough for the real world

The 0-60-mph sprint takes four and a half seconds, according to Audi; in the real world, you probably won’t close in on that unless you fire off a launch control start, as the single turbo takes a bit longer to fire up than the twin-turbo units found in the S6 and S7. Still, once the engine revs close to — or better yet, past — 3,000 rpm, the S5 bolts forward like a scared mare. The eight-speed automatic is of the traditional torque converter variety, but you’d never guess based on how quickly it snaps off downshifts when on the boil. Unless your (hopefully) imaginary pursuers are driving something with serious sports car credentials, odds are good you can outrun them in this Audi.
The S5 Sportback boasts a quartet of drive modes (comfort, auto, dynamic and individual, for the record), but without an adaptive suspension to change up the ride firmness, there’s little point to using them. Ignore those modes; the only change you need to make when you want to drive briskly is to click the shift lever back into Sport, which adjusts the shift map from lethargic fuel-saving to quick-to-downshift boy racer.
Even if the suspension could be firmed up, though, it wouldn’t really fit the character of the car. The S5 isn’t meant to be a track machine — buy an RS 3 or RS 5 if you want that — but the gentle body roll in turns makes it feel even quicker (and more fun) than it already is. Plus, the ride is pleasantly smooth even over battered urban roadways. All told, the S5 Sportback’s balance of performance may not stand out on the spec sheet, but it’s more than plenty for fun on the street.