It’s about time, haha! These pictures are taken from the new (and absolutely fabulous) interview of Kimi by RedBulletin.com. You can check out the magazine PDF in German or in English (page 44). Further below is the entire article for those who’d rather read it clearly on the blog. And trust me, you will want to keep re-reading!
Raikkonen: "I’m finding a bit of the young Kimi in me again"
The full interview
From RedBulletin.com
Words by Werner Jessner | Photography by Gian Paul Lozza
The carbon-fibre disc brakes on his Formula One Ferrari have barely cooled down, but already Kimi Raikkonen has moved on to something new: a driver for the very same Red Bull Citroen World Rally team that has just taken Sebastien Loed to his sixth consecutive world title.
The arrival of Raikkonen is a huge coup for the World Rally Championship: for all his occasionally mute press conference performances, the guy’s a superstar. And while some might question the move from the ‘pinnacle of motorsport’ into a parallel universe of mud and trees and ice and snow rather than lap upon lap of pristine tarmac, the man himself has no doubts: this is a hugely serious attempt on an equally presitgious world series, one which he’ll attack with all the commitment for which he became famed in F1.
So, Kimi, let’s talk dirty. What’s the earliest rally car you can remember?
KR: My brother’s Ford Escort. Of course, as a good Finn, I saw rally care on TV from an early age. I liked Ari Vatanen and Juha Kankkunen’s Peugeot 205 T16s the best. The first rally I actually went to must have been the 1991 1000 Lakes Rally, which Kankkunen won in a Lancia Delta Integrale.
Were rally drivers your childhood heroes?
KR: I didn’t have any childhood heores, I was a fan of the sport, not individual drivers. During my childhood, Kankkunen, for example, was a world-class driver so he could have been an idol. I’ve met him since then. He’s still got a Peugeot 205 at home and a Group B Audi Quattro from the 1980s. He might even lend it to me if I asked nicely.
Was it inevitable that you would end up on the racetrack?
KR: I always wanted to give rallying a shot, but I did get into F1 very quickly [Raikkonen was only 21 when he made his F1 debut, for the Red Bull Sauber team at the Australian GP, scoring a point for sixth place]. So it became difficult to move sideways into rallying, which meant I just had to lump it. I didn’t get the chance until very late – I was almost 30 [Raikkonen competed i the 2009 Rally Finland, in a Fiat Grande Punto Abarth]. I also think F1 helps you as a rally driver and vice versa.
But it would be a bit ungrateful to say that you were biding your time for nine years in F1 and you had to become world champion so that you could ultimately become a rally driver?
KR: That’s just how my career has worked out. Now it’s the right time to go for it with the right people and the right car for however long. I did negotiate with another F1 team for next season, but we couldn’t agree 100 per cent. Then Red Bull came and made me an offer to drive in the WRC for a season. It felt like the right thing to do straight away.
A lot of racing drivers in your position would have just bought themselves a world rally car and had some fun in it. But you’ve joined the Citroen Juniour Team for a whole season where you’ll be up against Sebastien Loeb, the best rally driver in the history of the sport. Haven’t you made things difficult for yourself?
KR: It’s definately the biggest challenge yet. I’ve got to learn everything from scratch. But I want the challenge. I have to get to know the car, the rallies, how to work with my co-driver [Kaj Lindstrom], everything. I’m looking forward to it. And you’ve got to set yourself some competition if you really want to know how good you are. I’ll still be able to drive around the forest in a private rally car.
But when you entered the WRC last year, at the Rally Finland, it was a much more professional effort compared with other well-known converts.
KR: If you’re going to do something, do it with the best team. My car’s been prepared by Tommi Makinen’s team; these guys are super professional. Of course it’s a smaller operation than an F1 team, but they’re professionals. Even though the driver plays a bigger overall role in rallying than in F1, the best driver won’t win in a bad car. So that’s why I wanted an experienced co-driver so at least one of us would know what he was doing. I met Kaj Lindstrom through Tommi and we were ice spies for Chris Atkinson during the 2006 Monte Carlo rally. Kaj is outstanding; he and Tommi were World Champions together. Kaj was also the one to make first contact with Citroen Sport.
Does entering the World Rally Championship feel a bit like it felt when you first test-drove for Sauber F1 in 2000?
KR: Yes, I’m finding a bit of the young Kimi in me again. A world rally car is quicker and tougher than the S2000 car I dove last year on the Rally Finland; it’s 10 times better to driver and has more power. It’s why you can still come out of critical situations. If the Fiat ever went sideways with its non-turbo engine, it was game over.
So what about rolling the car in Finland last year?
KR: It wasn’t because I was going too fast! It was the opposite. The car had already begun falling apart, so I just wanted to get it to the service park. The Fiat definately wasn’t the quickest car in the S2000 class, nor the most stable. My line going into the left-hand turn was maybe 2m off and we turned over.
Why was your line bad?
KR: I was driving with my eyes and not my ears. But in rallying you’ve got to pay 100 per cent attention to what your co-driver says.
Is that something you still have to learn to do?
KR: It is. The driving itself shouldn’t be too much of a problem. If you know the special stage, there’ll hardly be any different usually. What makes the difference is the pacenotes [the co-driver’s notes on the road conditions for each stage of the rally] and your trust. That’s my main disadvantage starting out – I only know the Arctic Rally and Rally Finland. I’ve got to work the rest of the events out for myself.
Can you use other crews’ pacenotes?
KR: It’s always better to have your own. If you want to be really fast, you’ve got to have trust. And you’ll never have complete trust in someone else’s notes.
Does it help to follow other drivers’ tracks to get your bearings?
KR: No. There’s no way of knowing what the car in front of you might have done. You’ve got to do what the co-driver tells you.
When was your first roll?
KR: I was 14. I rolled my brother’s Lada. We had a 3km track close to home. Marcus Gronholm [Finland’s two-time world rally champion] also trained there. I over-braked the rear axle and rolled twice. The roll-bar [the car’s internal safety cage] also broke.
Your brother Rami was seen as a great rallying talent. Does he still drive?
KR: No, he’s a family man now. One year he was runner-up to Mikko Hirvonen [runner-up in the 2008 and 2009 World Rally Championships].
Have your nephews caught the motorsport bug?
KR: Absolutely! There’s only three and four and they already go karting. I’ve bought them a quad bike.
Are you a good co-drver?
KR: No. I’ve been co-driver to Tommi Makinen [four-time World Rally Champion] once. I have complete confidence in him, but I wouldn’t want to repeat the experience. Maybe I’ll sit alongside Load during a test. I don’t think he’ll do the same for me.
Are you expecting a couple of rolls next year?
KR: Of course. Over the course of the WRC there are bound to be a couple of shunts. Everyone makes mistakes in this sport and, as a rule, a mistake usually means you wreck the car. How many cars must Jari-Matti Latvala [WRC winner] and Hirvonen have destroyed before they won their firt world championship rally? The only driver who hasn’t rolled is Loeb. He’s an exception.
Do you think you’ll be more intuitive on tarmac or gravel surfaces?
KR: We’ve been amazingly fast on gravel, but tarmac will probably be more my thing. Snow will be the hardest. Your lines have got to be spot-on in the snow, whereas on tarmac it’s no big deal if you brake a metre too late and have to turn more sharply. You have to be able to read the gravel. On some types of gravel you’ve got incredible grip with rally tyres and on others you haven’t.
What sort of results are you expecting?
KR: The first few rallies are bound to be tough. Until I know how fast the other drivers are, I’m holding back on any personal expectations. I’m sure I won’t manage to keep up with the top four [Loeb, Dani Sordo, Hirvonen, Latvala].
Your team-mate Sebastien Ogier is also seen as a future star.
KR: Yeah, he’s really good. He’s a perfect yardstick to measure up against.
When you look back on your F1 career, is there a single moment you value above all others?
KR: In F1, every lap is more or less the same. It’s more difficult if it rains, but otherwise it soon becomes a routine. In rallying, every corner or hill might be different from what you expected. The most fun I’ve had in recent years was fooling around with friends on snow-scooters, for example. I’d find it difficult to pick a single moment from the last nine years.
How about this as a moment to go down in history? Kimi Raikkonen overtaking Giancarlo Fisichella on the outside at Suzuka on the last lap of the 2005 Japanese GP, to win the race?
KR: Yeah, that was really good.
The 2009 Ferrari must have been really difficult to drive when we see how badly Giancarlo Fisichella struggled when he stepped in for the injured Felipe Massa. Not to mention [Ferrari test driver] Luca Badoer.
KR: The car wasn’t bad. It just didn’t have enough grip. It was hard to driver but I liked the 09 Ferrari more than the 08. I didn’t cope too badly [Raikkonen won the 2009 Belgian GP]. But it made Fisichella age 10 years in two races!
If you couldn’t get a neutrally balanced car, would you prefer oversteer or understeer [a car that has more or less front/rear grip]?
KR: I’ve never liked understeer. How can you push the car if you don’t know whether it’s going to steer? You lose time on a circuit but in rallying, you end up in the trees because you run out of space.
How much communication does motorsport need?
KR: As a driver, there are some things you just can’t communicate. No F1 driver in the world can talk to an aerodynamics engineer on an equal footing because they have completely diffferent levels of understanding. All you can do is tell your race engineer what you’d ideally like. Mechanics are important too but they do what engineer tell them to. So your communication is limited to two or, at most three, people in the team. And then what’s made of your input depends on the team.
In rallying, you’ll sometimes have to work on the car yourself. Do you know know to?
KR: I enjoy it. In Finland, I’ve always repaired my own cars. I tweak my bikes too. There’s nothing wrong with getting your fingers dirty.
Did you foster the ‘Iceman’ image to survive in F1?
KR: No. ‘Iceman’ goes back a long way. In F1, politics gets in the way of the exciting side of things. The atmosphere in rallying is much nicer and there’s a lot less politics involved. It’s must more about how the driver performs.
You’re a celebrity, especially in Finland. Now that you’re moving over into Finland’s national sport – rallying – you probably won’t dare to go out on the streets of Helsinki at all.
KR: I don’t care about that. It can’t be any worse than it already is. I’ve learned to deal with it.
You did military service. What did you find most difficult about it?
KR: The first couple of months were stressful. We were constantly roared at. By the end we were bored and messed around. Apart from military films where everyone’s roaring, getting up early was the worst.
Rally drivers often have to get up early too.
KR: I know. But I had to get out of bed early for F1 sometimes too. It’s part of the job.
What’s your favourite toy during the off-season?
KR: A snowmobile. It’s huge fun tearing around Lapland with friends on one. But Motocross comes close.
What makes a good road car?
KR: Space.
What’s the last sport you’ve tried?
KR: I started climbing last year on the recommendation of my fitness trainer, and it’s fun.
Who’s going to win ice hockey’s Stanley Cup?
KR: The San Jose Sharks.
Who’s going to win snowboarding Olympic gold in the half-pipe?
KR: I’ll keep my fingers crossed for the Finns, but it’ll probably be hard to beat Shaun White.
Who’s going to be the next World Rally Champion?
KR: Loeb or Hirvonen. Loeb.
And MotoGP?
KR: Have the teams changed much? No. So – Rossi.
Formula One?
KR: Hard to say. I don’t know what Ferrari’s plans are. Mercedes will probabaly have a good car, so will McLaren. Red Bull Racing probably will too. So I’m going to have to award the title based on who I like: Sebastien Vettel. He’s so down-to-earth.
Do you have much contact with him?
KR: I know Heikki Kovalainen better. As a rule, I don’t have that much contact with people from F1. Sometimes I play badminton with Vettel. He’s moving to my part of Switzerland so we’ll probably see more of each other.
How interested will you be in F1 if you’re not in an F1 car yourself?
KR: I’ll watch a race on TV every now and then. Maybe I’ll go to the Monaco Grand Prix. I could get an F1 drive again any time, but lots of bad things are happening in F1. Manufacturers are pulling out. Let’s have the same conversation in a year’s time.
Let’s look way into the future. What would an WRC title mean to you?
KR: More than my F1 world championship title. I’m just starting out and I can sense what a long journey it would be to get to that point.
No one’s done it before.
KR: That’s another thing that makes it interesting.



awesome!can’t wait to see the car now! Roll on 2010
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The only thing that leaves a bad taste in my mouth is the Red Bull ‘image’, and their logo on their website and magazine (it is a one-eye with devil horns… makes it pretty obvious who they’re working for) etc lol
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kimi pls tidy your wierd shaped hats 😀
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Here is the English version PDF to download, courtesy of Vida from the Planet-F1 forum:http://www.mediafire.com/file/yqhlztkdz5j/redbulletin.pdf🙂
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Thanks Saima 🙂 I feel good after reading such a long interview. I really looking forward for Kimi driving a racing car again. Hopefully you can share you will share some link to watch the race online 🙂
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Hi Saima, I wasn’t able to download the redebulletin’s pdf-version from mediafire! It isn’t the fist time, that mediafire s messing with me. :(( Could you send it to me to my e-mail, please, please?
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Sent 🙂
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I would imagine he will be starting testing soon before the arctic rally 😀
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I think so Michael, I assume those tests would be private and maybe we won’t get to see any pictures as a result…
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maybe, but I would’ve thought Red Bull would like to promote it at the same time. Won’t be long before we find out, the warm up rally is in what, 2 weeks or so. Excitement is slowly building. Good interview as well!
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I guess they would too! But I dunno, from what Kimi said above, about preparing for rallies: "I’ll still be able to drive around the forest in a private rally car." The actual shakedown begins on the 28th.Remember, all details about Arctic Lapland rally are here: http://www.arcticrally.fi/english/program.htmlSo fingers crossed! 🙂
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Absolutely fantastic!!! It was so nice to read this interview and Kimi seems so relaxed! Looks like he can´t wait to get his hands on that car either! He didn´t say a word for so long and now this! So open and soooooo Kimi!. Brilliant, brilliant interview, props to the interviewer for asking smart questions, we know our boy gets bored otherwise, lol!!! It was kinda sad to read that he didn´t have a memorable moment in F1, but he kinda explained why not later, when he said that a lot of bad things were happening in F1 at the moment. Being the true racer that he is, he doesn´t want any of the political crap that F1 has turned into, he just wants to race, everyone should want just that…..oh and I liked his pic for WDC!!!! :)Thanks for taking the time to type this out Saima, I really appreciate it!KEEP FLYING KIMI!!!!!!
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WOW!!! Fantastic interview been waiting for that for a long time :DKimi looks such a "sexy boy" in the first pic but what’s up with that fat cap again thought we’re done with it after the Ferrari era :PI’m counting the days til the Arctic Lapland rally…just can’t wait.
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Great interview and thanks Saima. He sounds so much happier to be out of F1. Looks like WRC may be a permanent switch if all goes well!
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Sorry to post twice but I just had to say that Kimi’s comments on the S2000 Fiat were most amusing!! 🙂 Dear old Luca dM – what would he say?
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This is the most revealing and relaxed interview ever from Kimi. Thanks for posting this, Saima. Kimi’s responses didn’t come across as short and clipped, instead he seems keen to share, with a dash of Kimi humour thrown in! I think his move away from F1 is doing him good, although I do agree with some of you he should ditch his flat cap. However, he still makes the silly cap look good on him. HA! Ha!
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Cool as ICE……
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I think I’m going to like the rallying Raikkonen even more! He sounds happy and with a new zest for life. Go Kimi!!! I like what I hear!
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so great and proud!he loves the challege and he’ll fight hard! i like expecially some answers as the last one. no f1 winner has win in rally, so Kimi’s more and more interested in that ah ah ah!keep pushing, Kimi, so great and cooooool!!!!!
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Hi Evenstar and others!This interview of Kimi is so good. It’s long time a have seen anything like this. Couple of comments to Kimi’s interview. First of all, Loeb has rolled his car several times. At least once last year. Then about Kaj Lindström, Kimi’s c.o. driver. He has not win World Championship with Tommi Mäkinen. Mäkinen has won four world titles. First two of those came with his original c.o. driver Seppo Harjanne and last to with his second c.o. driver Risto Mannisenmäki. When Tommi and Risto crashed heavily in year 2001, Risto was injured and after that Kaj Lindström came to drive with Tommi. Of course Lindström is creat c.o. driver, but he has not won World Championship with Tommi.But lets see what happens. May be Kimi will win WRC Title after couple of years and come back to F1. Schumacher is coming back and he is 41! Kimi is only 30!
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