
Toyota Gazoo Racing (TGR) has been utilizing high-profile rally environments not just to defend their current titles, but to actively experiment with the future of the sport’s powertrains.
Morizo Takes the Wheel: The Hydrogen Experiment
At the opening round of the championship in Monaco, Akio Toyoda personally took to the legendary tarmac circuit to demonstrate this internal combustion hydrogen prototype. For Toyoda, the mission isn’t just about zero-emissions; it’s about preserving the emotional soul, mechanical connection, and aggressive sound of rallying for future generations.
The Public Masterclass: Showcasing the New GR Yaris Platforms
To bridge the gap between their top-flight development and the road cars you can actually buy, Toyota turned the world’s most famous rally stages into a live testing showcase for their latest road-going platforms:

1. The GR Yaris Aero Performance Grade
Toyota rolled out the official production debut of the GR Yaris Aero Performance package. This platform directly feeds lessons learned from the WRC right back to the street. The car features six distinct aerodynamic changes tested in actual competition, including:
- Fender Ducts: Designed to release trapped air from the front wheelhouses to sharpen front-end turn-in under heavy braking.
- Variable Rear Wing: An adjustable, rally-style spoiler to manually alter the high-speed aero balance depending on whether you’re on a circuit or a tight mountain pass.
2. The Special Editions (Ogier & Morizo Modes)
Toyota also unveiled the highly exclusive Sébastien Ogier 9x World Champion Edition alongside the MORIZO RR. The engineering genius here lies in the software calibration of the 4WD systems, which feature custom driving modes developed personally by Ogier and Toyoda:
- “SEB” Mode: Replaces standard track modes, utilizing a 40:60 front-to-rear torque split engineered to give the car a more aggressive, rear-driven rotation while maintaining crisp steering feedback.
- “MORIZO” Mode: Developed by Akio himself through rigorous rally testing, this mode maximizes the direct mechanical binding force between the front and rear axles during hard acceleration, before smoothly easing off under braking to maximize corner-entry traction.
What This Means for the Constructors’ Championship
Toyota’s aggressive testing of these varying architectures—from raw mechanical aero packages to alternative fuel concepts—comes at a critical time. With the team dominating the current standings and securing consecutive 1–2 finishes across international gravel and tarmac events, Akio Toyoda’s “hands-on” approach ensures that whatever technical framework the FIA throws at the sport next, the GR Yaris platform is already engineered to win.



