Junkyard Find: 2000 Oldsmobile Intrigue GLS, Phoenix Open Edition

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The Oldsmobile Division had just six years to live when the Intrigue appeared in the 1998 model year, and this car was Oldsmobile’s final version of the long-lived GM W platform. I see thousands of W-bodies every year, during my junkyard travels, but it takes a special one to make me reach for my camera. Say, a supercharged Daytona 500 Edition Grand Prix, or a Lumina Euro, or a genuine Phoenix Open-badged Intrigue.

Here’s an example of the latter car that I found languishing in a Phoenix wrecking yard, just 30 miles from the Phoenix Open’s high-zoot venue.

I couldn’t find much information about the Phoenix Open Intrigues, other than that Oldsmobile was the sponsor of the tournament in 2000. My guess is that GM provided a brace of Olds vehicles for officials and VIPs to drive during the event. These badges look classy.

The car also has these little decals atop the pinstripes.

The standard engine in the 2000 Intrigue was the “Shortstar” DOHC V6, loosely based on the Northstar V8. It was good for 215 horsepower, which made the 3,455-pound Intrigue move acceptably well.

This car is a top-trim-level GLS model, which came with leather seats and other luxuries demanded by pro golfers in the year 2000.

I couldn’t get a mileage figure from the digital odometer, but the front seats are sufficiently beat to suggest that this car went around the block more than a few times.

“Start to command performance. Start something.”

Nothing down! Low payments!







Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • MRF 95 T-Bird MRF 95 T-Bird on Apr 25, 2017

    These were decent W-Body cars but by the time these as well as the Aurora were out Olds was trying to be GM's Infiniti or Lexus. Personally I prefer the Buick Regal GS or Pontiac Grand Prix with the far more durable 3800SC. A little praise for the Church of 3800. The grill less look of these later Oldsmobiles gave me the impression GM might merge the similar styling themed Saturn's in the model line. It might have saved both divisions.

  • JEFFSHADOW JEFFSHADOW on Apr 25, 2017

    I just bought another Oldsmobile from Copart in Kansas City: A 2002 Intrigue GLS (Tropic Teal - code 37) with 56,000 miles for $700. It had right front fender damage (looked terrible but I bought a replacement fender at Pick-a-Part for $24) Now it is showroom perfect, runs fantastic and I kept it from the wrecking yard for pure insurance company reasons. The two-tone interior in mint condition is an added bonus!

    • Joeaverage Joeaverage on May 07, 2017

      Anybody that says you can't drive for cheap in 2017 isn't trying very hard.

  • Michael S6 I am the biggest critic of American car industry with its emphasis on marketing and selling massive gas hogging Trucks and Suv's.However, China is an authoritarian country that suppress its population and support countries such as Russia and North Korea. it's part of axis of countries that opposses USA in every way possible. Thus I will never buy a Chineses car (even if built by Grovel Motors or other two local clowns). I agree that we must keep the Chinese EV invasion at bay.
  • TheMrFreeze The American auto industry is the last large vestige of our once great industrial power...a nation like ours NEEDS industrial power of this type to survive. Case in point, at the beginning of the pandemic, when PPE and ventilators were desperately needed and our only source was China, it was the US automakers who quickly pivoted to start manufacturing them. No other industry in this country has the skill or manufacturing capabilities to do that.When you take this into consideration, plus the fact that Chinese automakers are financially supported by the CCP while US automakers function as fully free market entities, I have zero problem with a huge tariff being placed on Chinese vehicles to level the playing field. I do think, however, that the government then has the right to "remind" the Big 3 that it's now up to them to provide the affordable vehicles to fill the void the Chinese would have filled.
  • Fahrvergnugen Don't knock the Chinese so loudly. They are listening, and reading everything, keeping Naughty and Nice lists.
  • Redapple2 2026 f1 cars. Even more crappie! Tune in!F1 is crap. Garbage racing.1 must use 2 types of tires2 cant refuel3 DRS - only in certain places. in certain situations. on certain days of the week. and.... 4 same team wins 90% of races.Go IMSA !!!! or Moto GPPS- Historic Monaco races last weekend were spectacular. All 10 hr on TV.
  • Redapple2 volume meets or exceeds expectations......................... But, they always give you high annual volume to quote so they get a cheaper price. You have to tool up to that volume (costing you extra$) because if that part number reaches that volume and you cant meet it? Whao unto you. After getting burned by gm 10 yrs ago, we moved to heavy truck and agriculture products only. Steady volumes. More profits. 30 net payment. The vampire is up to 90-120 days now? Never big 3 work. Ever !
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