[M]anuel Posted January 12, 2022 Posted January 12, 2022 Lamborghini has always been one of my favorite brands. With several posters hanging on my wall, I always dreamed of the idea of getting on one. That childhood dream has come true thanks to the fact that two of his beasts have passed through my hands. Every child's dream is to be able to get into a powerful car and gallop to the beat of the road and an evocative sound. In our earliest childhood, we dream of reaching those moments that rarely occur in adult life. Riding a Lamborghini is a goal, a dream, let alone being able to drive two of its most beastly models. The Lamborghini Urus and the Lamborghini Huracán hang on many walls, but for this time, they have been mine. Ferruccio Lamborghini was a self-made man. Taking today's standards we speak of him as a visionary and an entrepreneur. We all know his story, and I don't want to be the one to bore the audience by telling something we all know. I grew up in the 80s and 90s, the era of the Lamborghini Countach and Diablo. They were both figured decorating my student portfolio, and just seeing one was more than enough reason to have a great day (I don't remember seeing one until I was older). Who was going to tell that little Javier that he would have to wait a few years to be able to drive it? If he had told me I would not have believed it, but it has been. Although Italy is synonymous with Ferrari, the Lamborghini bulls are pure transalpine essence. From its headquarters in Sant'Agata Bolognese, great figures have come out of the supercar market: Miura, Espada, LM002, Murcielago, Aventador, Gallarod, Huracán and finally Urus, adding the occasional extraordinary unit such as Reventón, Sesto Element, Veneno or Centenary. Each one more spectacular. https://www.motor.es/pruebas-coches/prueba-lamborghini-huracan-y-urus-202183564.html 1
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