
For years, Kimi Räikkönen was the man Formula 1 fans could never fully decode — the Iceman, the quiet rebel, the world champion who preferred to speak with his driving rather than his words. But off the track, beyond the memes and monosyllabic interviews, lies a version of Kimi few people ever truly get to see: the father, the husband, the man whose world looks very different from the roaring circuits he once dominated.
In a rare and unexpectedly heartfelt conversation, Räikkönen opened up about his family life — and especially the emotions that hit him every time he watches his son, Robin, climb into a kart.
And for once, the Iceman melted.
“People think I don’t feel much,” Kimi began with a familiar smirk. “But when I see my son racing… yes, I feel a lot. Maybe too much.”
He described standing by the fence of a karting track, quietly observing as Robin adjusts his helmet, grips the wheel, and waits for the lights to go out. It is a scene Kimi knows better than anyone — the mix of calm and chaos before a race. Yet watching it as a father, he admits, is entirely different.
“You want him to enjoy it,” he said. “That’s the main thing. I don’t care if he wins or not. I care that he smiles when he takes the helmet off.”
For a man whose own early career was built on raw talent, instinct, and a relentless desire for speed, Kimi is surprisingly protective when it comes to his son’s experience in motorsport. He never pushes. He never pressures. He refuses to be the overbearing ex-champion dad shouting instructions from the sidelines.
“I’m there if he asks,” Kimi said simply. “If he doesn’t ask, I won’t say anything.”
He knows better than anyone the weight that motorsport can put on young shoulders. The expectations. The comparisons. The fear of disappointing people. That, he says, is the last thing he wants for Robin.
“When he drives, I get nervous,” Kimi admitted — a confession that would make any F1 fan raise an eyebrow. Kimi Räikkönen… nervous? But he clarified it in the most touching way:
“Nervous because I want him to be safe. Nervous because I want him to have fun. Not because of the result.”
He laughs softly when he talks about people assuming Robin will be “the next Kimi.”
“I don’t want him to be the next me,” he said. “I want him to be himself.”
Off the track, Kimi credits his wife, Minttu, for keeping their family grounded. He describes her as the “real champion” at home — the one who organizes, supports, and balances the chaos of a family constantly in motion. Their life is simple, outdoorsy, and far from the flash of the F1 paddock.
But it’s the karting days that bring out a side of Kimi that fans rarely get to witness. He stands quietly, hands in pockets, observing every small detail — the type of person who feels deeply, even if he doesn’t show it.
When Robin finishes a run, Kimi always asks the same question:
“Did you enjoy it?”
Not “Were you fast?”
Not “Did you win?”
Not “Why didn’t you take that corner better?”
Just one thing: did it make you happy?
Because for Kimi Räikkönen, the racing legend who conquered Monaco, who outdueled giants, who lived life on his own terms — happiness is the only result that matters now.
In the end, the Iceman remains cool. But when it comes to his son behind the wheel of a kart, he reveals the warmest truth of all:
“I’m proud of him. Not because he races… just because he’s my boy.”








