Also: The Sapphire is probably the greatest daily driver ever made.
That's your opinion, but it is not everyone's.
I think the Sapphire is the best ultra-high-performance sports sedan ever made, and I long grappled with a decision about whether to replace our Air Dream Performance with a Sapphire, as I am something of an acceleration junkie. However, I do not track my cars, and there were too many trade-offs for the Sapphire to become my preferred daily driver -- and the Air Dream P already had more acceleration punch than can be used on public roads. (Even though our Plaid is a tick quicker, the Air's ability to keep the front end planted under hard acceleration makes its power more accessible than the Tesla's.)
I did not want to lose the glass canopy which, with the Air's high belt line, really opens up the interior visually. For the same reason, I did not want the dark interior palette of the Sapphire. I did not want the prominent side bolsters of the front seats or to replace the sumptuous feel of the Nappa leather with Alcantara seating surfaces. I did not want any more suspension stiffness than the Air Dream. Our Model S Plaid, which has the same wider tire cross sections as the Sapphire, tramlines on certain roads in our area, and I did not want to risk that trait in the Air. For driving on road trips, I even worried about whether most tire shops would have the equipment to get the center-lock wheels off the car in case of a flat.
Yet the Sapphire powertrain still drew me. I even went so far as to call Zak Edson, Lucid's VP of Sales and Service, to see if would be possible to get an Air Dream or Grand Touring interior installed in a Sapphire but was told no.
So . . . as superb as the Sapphire is on so many fronts and as friendly as it can still be for most daily driving, many people might justifiably not see it as the greatest daily driver ever made.