That's very interesting. I've found them outstanding on really awful road surfaces, country B roads Gloucestershire, Shropshire, Worcestershire area where it's far from marble smooth track like surfaces. Conversely I also run a Clio 200 with the cup chassis and I even started a tread on Clio197/200.net about how to improve the damping without spending silly money.
A 200 cup chassis as standard is awful at speed on the type of roads I mention above. Really crashy, bouncing all over the place, skittery and banging in the cabin, not confidence inspiring at all. Zero compliance. It's like it attempts to smash the road into submission, whereas the Trophy is like a magic carpet floating above it all.
The interesting contrast is that at very slow speed (0-20mph) the Trophy will knock your teeth out, but the 200 is more composed, turn it up to illegal speeds and the Trophy is so lithe and composed. The 200 seeming to struggle with any surface imperfection.
Jean Ragnotti was a specialist tarmac rally driver after all, so perhaps he knows a lot about damping for imperfect surfaces we don't...
Totally agree with Gordon here. The faster you travel in the T the more the damping comes into it's own.