$1500 a year for full coverage with way-more-than-minimum values and $1000 deductibles. 25 year old single male with 16 total career point accumulation (0 on record now) and several at-fault and non-fault collisions that are about to fall off at my next renewal.
Back in Jersey, when I first started driving in 2000 at 17 years old I was paying $1200 a year for more-than-minumim liabilities on my own policy. It was great. Several non-fault collisions and several tickets (including Street Racing) later, I was "High Risk Grouped" and paying $4,300.00 a year for minimum liabilities ONLY. When shopping for new cars in '02 I was quoted $7,400 a year on a WRX; $8,100 on a Celica, and so on. By 2006, I was down to $2900 from collisions and points falling off, still for minimum liabilities only. When I moved to Delaware, it dropped to $1800. When I turned 25, it dropped to an even $1000. Financed the MS3 a few weeks later, and now pay what I mentioned in the first line.
Maybe it'll take you getting dropped by a major carrier, put in the High Risk Group, and your insurance costs getting to that point...to get you to slow down (or at least speed smarter). Or, maybe a few more tickets and some license suspension. Hopefully it'll be that and not a tree or worse, an innocent driver.
Get older and drive safer. Only one of those you can do something about, and you should be able to recognize that you have a problem and buying a car like this doesn't help. By the time I was 19, I had accumulated 13 points in a car that did a 16 second 1/4 on a great day and had wrecked and nearly killed myself in a car that would run high 17s all day long..all due to speed and other speed-related activities. Fast car + Young Guy that admittedly wants to drive fast = Bad News. Yeah, my example proves that slow cars aren't necessarily any better, but they were still "sporty" cars. Drive a beat up 80s Accord or Camry until you get out of college and save your money; when you graduate you can buy that sports car you've wanted in cash, without having to rely on your folks or put yourself in debt.
Sorry for sounding preaching, but having been where you are, I'm just trying to give you some advice to better your life.