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Updated 21:13 IST, January 20th 2025

'You Can’t Win': Kevin Magnussen Leaves Behind The Life Of F1, Starts New Life In Auto Racing

Kevin Magnussen leaves behind F1 as he looks to start a new career in endurance racing.

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Kevin Magnussen
Kevin Magnussen | Image: AP

Formula One driver Kevin Magnussen was one of the most experienced drivers on the grid up until his departure from the sport this season. Kevin Magnussen was a driver for Haas Formula One team right until the 2020 season. He then returned back to the sport, again with Haas in 2022 where he drove for another two seasons. He has now once again lost his seat in Formula One as he now looks to begin a new career in auto racing in a different world of motorsports. 

Kevin Magnussen Leaves Formula One With Relief 

It is with great relief that Kevin Magnussen leaves Formula 1 in his rearview mirror after a 10-year career that produced exactly one podium finish, way back in his 2014 rookie season.

Magnussen’s decade of racing in a car that can’t win ended when Haas decided to make a full roster change for 2025. It kicked Magnussen out of the series, probably for good this time.

Haas had fired Magnussen after the 2020 season but brought him back in 2022 for two more years. The Danish driver now feels excitement moving into a new phase of his career centered around sports car racing.

Aside from the 2021 season when he ran in the IMSA sports car series while out of F1 work, he hasn’t competed in a car capable of winning during that decade in F1. But in sports cars? Magnussen can be a champion.

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Magnussen’s new job began during this weekend’s preparation for the Rolex 24 at Daytona, where he will be part of the No. 24 BMW M Team RLL Hybrid V8 lineup. Magnussen will run the three endurance races on the IMSA schedule and a full season as a factory driver for BMW M in the World Endurance Championship.

A step down? Not a chance, according to Magnussen, who prefers the friendlier confines of the sports car world and being out of a Haas car that started every F1 weekend without a chance at winning. 

“The whole atmosphere is drivers are here for the love of the sport, rather than on a mission to become the greatest in the world,” Magnussen said of international sports car racing. “And, I’ve gone for 10 years and never had a chance for winning. All those years, I knew that I didn’t have a chance to win. I’m a racer and I’m competitive. I grew up wanting to become the best.

“And when you’ve done 10 years of knowing you can’t win, that gets kind of old after a while.”

Magnussen Taking Part In Rolex 2 For The Third Time

Next week’s Rolex 24 will be the third of Magnussen’s career. He ran for Chip Ganassi Racing in 2021 when he ran a full season with Ganassi in IMSA, and then it was his 2022 season-opening race as he prepared for a second year with Ganassi, only to be a late hire to return to Haas.

He said he has no desire to pursue a third opportunity in F1. He also isn’t interested in IndyCar, calling it “the series that got away from me” because the years he could have been in an Indy car he was pursuing F1 instead. And, he said, he wouldn’t try for an Indianapolis 500 ride because it isn’t worth it unless he could get a seat with Ganassi, McLaren or Team Penske. 

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A large part of his contentment with sports cars is because Magnussen truly loves this racing after growing up watching it. His father, Jan, is a four-time sports car champion who won nearly 50 races.

The father and son raced together as co-drivers in the 2021 24 Hours of Le Mans in the LMP2 class. They were scheduled to pair again two years later at the Rolex 24, but Kevin Magnussen was a late scratch when he required surgery on his left wrist.

But sports cars are very much where Magnussen wants to be. He is 32 and has two young children, and with just 11 races solidified on his 2025 schedule — the bulk of the eight-race WEC schedule is in Europe — he can continue living in Denmark and have a comfortable life in cars he loved as an aspiring young racer.

“I came here so much as a kid and grew up at these races in a way and always knew I wanted to be a part of that,” Magnussen said. “As a young boy you look up to your dad and want to do what he is doing. I guess for many drivers, Formula 1 is like the pinnacle, which it is for me as well, but I certainly have an extra passion for sports car racing because I grew up with it.”

He is grateful his two daughters got a little taste of his F1 career and were able to go to the track to see Daddy at his job. But he’s excited for them to enjoy the easier atmosphere of sports car racing and the relaxed vibe in the paddock and motorhome lots.

“Sports car racing is more pure. I think people love what they do more in sports cars than they do in Formula 1. Because it’s so competitive (in F1) it can be kind of cold, in a way,” Magnussen said. “I arrived here and see everyone smiling and looking forward to the race and everything. It’s a different vibe, different environment.”

The Rolex 24 at Daytona begins next Saturday. It is considered the most prestigious endurance race in North America and the opener of the 2025 motorsports season.

(With AP Inputs)

Published 21:13 IST, January 20th 2025