We’re nearly at the end of 2025, and ironically, in the age of electrification, it appears that the manual transmission, at least in the performance segment, is slowly coming back into relevance. Porsche continues to offer them on their GT cars, and even Toyota refuses to let it die in the Supra. At the other end of the spectrum, three pedals are also making a comeback in the highly coveted V12 manual format. But if you want the last production model with the raging bull badge that sent power exclusively to the rear wheels through a proper gated six-speed, you’re looking at the Lamborghini Gallardo LP 560-2 50th Anniversario, the final chapter in Lamborghini’s analog era.
When the original Lamborghini Gallardo launched back in 2003, it marked a radical shift for the brand. Jeremy Clarkson famously pointed out in his review that the Gallardo had normal doors and the footprint of a VW Golf, which made it surprisingly practical and usable. This wasn’t the wild, theatrical Lamborghini with the flamboyant scissor doors that demanded considerable effort to get across town. With AWD, it was the Italian automaker’s first attempt at something you could actually drive daily, all without sacrificing the noise, performance, or visual drama that made the badge iconic in the first place.


The Gallardo was also Lamborghini’s first car developed entirely under Audi’s ownership. The brief was clear: build a smaller, more accessible Lamborghini but still offer plenty of drama when you ask for it. Belgian designer Luc Donckerwolke, the man behind the flagship V12 Murciélago, shaped the baby Lambo with sharp edges, a rakishly low windscreen, and that unmistakable wedge stance. Under the engine cover sat a 5.0-liter V10 making 500 horsepower, paired with either an E-Gear automated manual or the open-gate six-speed that became a hallmark of early-2000s Lamborghinis.
Over its ten-year production run, Lamborghini built over a dozen special variants and just over 14,000 Gallardos across two generations, making it one of the brand’s best-sellers by a wide margin until the Urus came along. Plenty of Gallardos, as previously mentioned, came with manual transmissions, but most were all-wheel drive. Lamborghini made far fewer rear-wheel-drive Gallardos, making them considerably rarer and more engaging to drive.
That story really began with the 2009 LP 550-2 Valentino Balboni, a rear-drive Gallardo named after Lamborghini’s legendary test driver. It was this car that broke from Lamborghini tradition in the most radical way, because it ditched the front drive shafts and all-wheel drive and delivered 550 horsepower through a gated six-speed transmission. Only 250 examples were produced, all coupes, each with that signature white and gold stripe and a numbered plaque. Today, these cars command $60,000 to $100,000 premiums over standard Gallardos.


The reaction to the Balboni was so strong that Lamborghini decided to take this winning recipe mainstream, and in 2010, the LP 550-2 Coupe joined the lineup as a full-production model. It shared the Balboni’s powertrain but dropped the limited-edition trim and numbering. A Spyder variant followed in 2012.
By this point, the Audi R8 had also entered the picture. Sharing its V10 engine and basic aluminum architecture with the Gallardo, it represented Audi’s version of the same idea: a supercar you could use every day. The R8 refined the formula with Quattro all-wheel drive, magnetic dampers, and, crucially, a manual transmission that remained available until 2015. But while the R8 was polished and understated, the Gallardo was raw, louder, and far more dramatic. The LP 560-2 50th Anniversario took that shared DNA and turned it into something purer.
Introduced in 2013, the LP 560-2 50th Anniversario was a send-off to commemorate Lamborghini’s 50th anniversary. Available in both Coupe and Spyder bodystles, it combined the rear-wheel-drive setup of the 550-2 with the facelifted bodywork and interior of the later 560-series cars. Power came from a 5.2-liter naturally aspirated V10 producing 550 horsepower and 398 pound-feet of torque.
You could still choose between the automated E-Gear or the rare gated manual, making it one of the last factory Lamborghinis ever to offer a clutch pedal. Production was limited to roughly 100 to 150 units worldwide, and it quietly marked the end of an era. Highlights included Bianco Opalis (pearl white), a black Alcantara cabin with Rosso Alala (red) contrast stitching, and a fixed carbon wing. These cars seldom show up for sale, but here’s a video from Lamborghini Dallas, giving us a closer look at the LP 560-2 50th Anniversario.
After all, the celebrated manual transmissions Lamborghinis paired with rear-wheel drive had always defined the brand’s identity. From the Miura to the Countach, Diablo, and early Murciélago, every great model demanded driver involvement. Even as Ferrari and others were starting their move toward paddle-shifted semi-automatics, Lamborghini’s gated shifter remained a symbol of defiance and a link to a wilder era of supercars. The Gallardo carried that torch into the modern age, and that tradition effectively ended with the LP 560-2 50th Anniversario.
The Huracán that replaced it in 2014 went down the dual-clutch only route. Yes, it was quicker and more refined, but it lacked the engagement and analog feel of a true manual. Now, aftermarket conversions are trying to fill that void, with shops charging hefty sums to retrofit modern Lamborghinis with manual gearboxes. The Gallardo LP 560-2 50th Anniversario didn’t need retrofitting. Some examples actually left the factory with a stick, rear wheel drive, and rewarded drivers with a satisfying metallic click that no modern paddle could ever replicate. It remains one of the rarest, most significant, and collectible Gallardos ever built.
Images: Automobili Lamborghini, Lamborghini Dallas









