Autocar office parlance can be misleading - confusing, even – and when it starts creeping into print, either on this website or in the magazine, it usually needs explanation.

For instance, we conduct two marquee sports car tests every year, habitually titled ‘Britain’s Best Driver’s Car’ and our 'Everyday handling heroes' – the second of which you may have recently read about for 2015.

In the office, we simply call them ‘Handling Day’ and ‘Junior Handling Day’. But the ‘junior’ bit isn’t an entirely helpful part of the description, because it implies a sense of inferiority about the whole shebang that’s wholly unfounded.

‘Junior Handling Day’ is important. There are a vastly greater number of people genuinely interested in finding out how best to spend £30,000 on a new driver’s car than in how to spend a cool quarter of a million.

Much as we all want to know what the best-handling new car of any given year may be, for most of us it’s mainly only because we want to know. And, of course, so we wouldn’t make a bad buying decision after rushing out to spend the white-hot lottery-win cash in our pockets on the day our ship finally comes in.

Although affordable motors have won ‘Handling Day’ in recent years, more often than not they don’t. That’s because value for money isn’t part of the equation during the judging.

‘Handling Day’ is purely and simply to decide what the best driver’s car is at any money; to give the cream of the car industry a platform from which to show us where the very latest and greatest technology and talent has taken their wares.

To recognise greatness, and celebrate the very best of the best. But as the market for six-figure exotics has mushroomed these past ten years and the line-up for our main handling test has appeared more and more rarified, the need for a more pragmatically minded test of great driver's cars to run alongside it has grown.