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Watching sad KMag edits and came across the video of Louise and Laura sitting with him on the grid. He looks so emotional and his girls are right there for him. đĽš
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Awww. Louise just shared this of her and the girls waving to Kev in Abu Dhabi and another pic of Kevin on NYE sitting with 8 of their friendsâ kids đ¤
Kev on thinking he has time to be a Dad, getting called back to F1, priorities shifting, Laura liking the car, being torn about his kids being on socials and being neighbours with most of his family when they bought a house in his hometown âŚ
BAHRAIN, BAHRAIN - MARCH 1: Kevin Magnussen of Denmark and Haas F1, wife Louise Gjorup and their daughters in the paddock during qualifying ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain. (Photo by Kym Illman/Getty Images)
By Madeline Coleman
Jun 15, 2024
Just behind the Formula One teamsâ motorhomes inside the Monaco Grand Prix paddock, fans leaned over a fence, trying to catch a glimpse of their favorite driver. As various drivers passed by, they inevitably missed some fansâ requests for selfies and autographs.
But Laura Magnussen wasnât going to allow that to happen.
The three-year-old pushed her red scooter down the road behind a Haas team member and her father, Kevin Magnussen. When she realized he missed a fanâs autograph request, Laura scooted up to Kevin and tugged at his shirt, grabbing his attention and pointing at the fan. Kevin backtracked and signed the notebook, Laura pushing her scooter behind him.
It was just the latest of many moments featuring one of Magnussenâs two daughters to go viral on social media. Although plenty of team personnel, track employees and media members have families back home, Magnussen, teammate Nico HĂźlkenberg and Red Bullâs Sergio PĂŠrez are the only parents on the grid.
Motorsports are ruthless and dangerous, a cutthroat sport where every millisecond and millimeter count. As elite athletes like F1 drivers rise to the top of their respective sports, the focus largely is centered on them.
That is until a little one comes along, radically changing how the adults approach life.
âIt changed a lot of my priorities, like my perspective on life and my career and sport, and made everything else seem less important,â Magnussen said. âThereâs always pressure on the drivers and also a bit of an anxiety where you think, âIf I canât be racing, then what am I? What do I do with my life?â
âWhereas now, that side of it is all settled in a way. I know if Iâm not racing, then I have a fantastic life anyway.â
Magnussen didnât initially intend to have kids while racing in F1.
He joined the grid full-time in 2014 but lost his seat to Fernando Alonso a year later. Magnussen found a full-time seat for 2016 and was out of a seat again after the 2020 season. He moved on to the lower profile world of IMSA. Rather than traveling the globe and competing during 20-plus weekends a year, he raced in sports cars in North America at places like Belle Isle in Michigan and Watkins Glen in New York. He competed in nine races that season and had no marketing or simulator duties, he said.
âI thought (the) timing was perfect because I finished my Formula One career, I thought, and it was the right moment,â Magnussen said. âWe had a fantastic year. The next two years were fantastic, too, but in a much different way than I expected it to be.â
In January 2021, shortly before Magnussen flew to the U.S. for IMSA, he and Louise Gjørup Magnussen welcomed Laura into the world, born seven weeks early.
HĂźlkenberg was in a similar position when he and his wife, EglÄ RuĹĄkytÄ-HĂźlkenberg, had their daughter, Noemi Sky. âI was kind of a little bit out of the hot seat, and I had more time. Life was a bit more relaxed,â he said.
âMy wife said I was always in a good mood because I didnât have the bad days of the race weekend. You cut out the bad days, and youâre always kind of happy and balanced and well because we take this pretty seriously, this job, and if we have a bad weekend, it can tend to take up to a week to digest it, and obviously it impacts your mood.â
But when he returned to the grid full-time in 2023 with Haas, HĂźlkenberg said being a father didnât change his approach, just that his life now revolved more around his family, as well as racing.
âI think racing drivers, the way we are wired, when you get in the car and when you put the helmet on the visor down, you forget all that. You donât really think about it, and itâs just a blank mind,â he said. âYouâre solely focused on performance and getting the best possible result. So no, I donât think itâs changed my approach in the car. But outside, it takes a lot of focus and time being a dad.â
Sporting bright pink headphones and an all white outfit, Noemi Sky beamed as Nico and EglÄ walked through the Monaco paddock, swinging their daughter in the air. On her feet were a pair of decorated shoes in honor of her father, one reading âGo Daddyâ and the number two, and the other âNoemi Skyâ and the number seven. (Her name came from both parents: HĂźlkenberg liked Noemi after seeing it in movie credits on a flight with his wife, while EglÄ really liked Sky).
Bringing kids trackside takes a lot of planning, HĂźlkenberg said. Their schedules need to be factored in, like how to squeeze in naps at a noisy track. He added, âIf youâre away from home and you have the hotel and itâs far away from the circuit, you really have to make sure you have all the toys and the iPad or whatever to get through the day.â
MONTE-CARLO, MONACO - MAY 25: Haas F1 driver Nico Hulkenberg is accompanied by his wife Egle and daughter Noemi during previews ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Monaco. (Kym Illman/Getty Images)
Nico HĂźlkenberg said being a father didnât change his racing approach, just that his life now revolved more around his family, as well as racing.
Magnussen finds it both âfantasticâ and âfrustrating because Iâm too busy to really spend a lot of time with them. My kids think theyâre on holiday.â Anges is nearly one year old and has visited the paddock before. Laura now understands that her father is racing, which is something she looks forward to, he said.
âShe loves being in the garage and watching the car and all that. But still, she gets frustrated that Iâm not available for the whole weekend. She wants to swim in the pool, and she wants to explore the place that weâve come to, and I canât do that. Iâm just too busy.â
Magnussen says his oldest daughter isnât intimidated by the loud sounds that come with the sport, and when she is in the garage, she wants to be close to the car. âShe loves it, I think, because she knows that this is what daddy does, and she can be proud of the world that I go into every time I leave them alone.â
Over the past few years, Lauraâs become a recognizable figure in the paddock, often going viral on social media, like when she helped her father prepare in Abu Dhabi last year. With her headset on, she helped Magnussen out on his gloves and closed his visor.
Magnussenâs social media accounts are run by his team, but his wife shows him the content of their daughters when it pops up. âItâs something that I feel divided about,â the Dane said.
âLaura doesnât understand that millions of people are watching this and she didnât consent to that. Also I feel like itâs a lot of people. Laura has been recognized, and I feel like she didnât ask for that. I donât feel too good about it,â Magnussen continued. âBut at the same time, I think these videos are super cute, and these moments that we have had in the garage, theyâre very special. And I treasure those videos because itâs awesome that we got to have this to keep and look at years to come.â
They try to balance the chaotic life of an F1 family, building some normalcy and making the kids happy. Magnussen pointed out how the number one thing in life is having real relationships and friends, not the jet-setting lifestyle.
BAHRAIN, BAHRAIN - MARCH 2: Kevin Magnussen of Denmark and Haas F1 walks through the paddock with his daughter during the F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain. (Kym Illman/Getty Images)
âWhatever you think is important before youâre a parent,â Magnussen said, âdonât worry about it. Itâs not.â
âMe and my wife bought a house in a normal neighborhood with normal people close to our family. My wifeâs parents, they live one house next to us, and my dadâs house is also on the same street,â Magnussen said. âJust around the corner, my momâs house is also 100 meters away. My best friend is 50 meters. So weâre all within a radius of 100 meters, and I treasure that a lot.â
Even in a glitzy and glamorous world like F1, the simple moments in life may mean the most to the drivers, like flying home early to see their family or playing with their child after a difficult weekend. âItâs really nice when you have a bad weekend or a bad day and you go home and you take her and you play with her and she smiles at you,â HĂźlkenberg said. âIt helps to forget the day, and it makes you feel better in that moment.â
When it comes to being a parent, the driversâ priorities are the same as those of the everyday fan. Itâs wanting to protect and be there for their child, providing a life thatâll make them happy. Priorities shift fairly heavily in the new chapter, putting life in a different perspective despite competing in a pressure-cooker-eseque environment.
âWhatever you think is important before youâre a parent,â Magnussen said, âdonât worry about it. Itâs not.â