Sports cars are powerful vehicles, there’s no doubt about that. They may not be as brutal as supercars, but they’re still a strong performer, so they can still go wild in the wrong hands. By saying the wrong hands we mean the hands of those who have little to no expertise with them.
This incident is a good example of how dangerous a sports car can be when driven by the wrong person. Everything can go out of control in the blink of an eye.
Speeding up and down before the crash, the driver of this car was likely toying with speed a little bit. As the CCTV footage starts, it shows that the vehicle has already been out of control.

The driver is a 33-year-old man. His dangerous driving eventually caused his car to spin off the road and totally destroy a garden wall until it was stopped by a nearby lamp post. This crash happened in Humberston, Lincolnshire, England, just a few minutes after children biked on the same road.
The car is a Honda S2000 convertible that can run as fast as 150 mph. You can imagine how hard it hit that stopping point just by looking at the serious damage it sustained. Residents around the scene, meanwhile, learned that something bad had happened when they heard a shocking big bang breaking their afternoon peace.

Some of them saw bricks of the destroyed garden wall flying out “like bullets” when they rush out to see what had happened. What’s so ironic about this incident is that the Honda S2000 had only just been bought by the driver that day. In other words, it’s his new car and has already been destroyed shortly after it was purchased.
After getting out of his car and seeing all the destruction, the driver was just like, “Maybe it was a bit too powerful”. He was laughing, probably didn’t expect his car to go wild that quickly and easily. Such an unfortunate event could happen when you’re late to realize that you’re driving a sports car, a machine designed for high performance, or you underestimate them.
As we know, sports cars are made to be responsive, and their level of responsiveness may be too high for beginners, causing some noobs to think that their cars are too reactive to the input they provide; while in fact, it was them who fail to understand the right and safe dose of input.