Mick Schumacher pays tribute to father Michael Schumacher in Lego video 12 years on from skiing accident

The F1 icon won seven titles during his career
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Lego has officially announced the release of its Ferrari F2004 model from the Icons collection, set to become available on 1 March 2026 with a price tag of £89.99.
The Danish toymaker's latest offering recreates the legendary red single-seater that carried Michael Schumacher to his seventh and final Formula 1 world championship title.
This particular car holds a special place in both Ferrari and motorsport history, representing one of the most dominant machines ever to compete in the Circus.
The pricing matches earlier speculation that had circulated in recent weeks ahead of the official confirmation.
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The set comprises 735 individual pieces and carries the model number #11375.
When assembled, the replica measures 32 centimetres in length, 13 centimetres in width and stands 7 centimetres tall.
Collectors will find a dedicated display plaque included with the kit, allowing the finished model to be showcased properly.
Perhaps the most distinctive feature is a miniature figure of Schumacher himself, depicted standing on the podium while clutching a winner's trophy.
Official imagery released by Lego showcases the intricate details that have been incorporated into the brick-built recreation of the championship-winning machine.
To accompany the launch, Lego produced a visually striking promotional film with Mick Schumacher providing the voiceover.
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Michael Schumacher has been immortalised in Lego form
|LEGO
The video depicts the iconic red car moving across a white sheet of paper, its tyres leaving behind marks that gradually transform into recognisable imagery.
These tyre traces artistically form the outline of Ferrari's famous Prancing Horse emblem.
The marks also create a silhouette of the elder Schumacher performing his signature celebratory leap, the distinctive podium jump he executed following each of his victories throughout his career.
Mick, born in March 1999, was just a young child during his father's dominant era with the Italian manufacturer.
In the promotional film, Mick opens up about his earliest recollections of watching his father compete.
Michael Schumacher won seven F1 titles during his career | GETTY"My first memories of my dad racing are of him winning with a Ferrari," he says.
"My dad and that car were working together, trying to reach 100 per cent perfection. The V10 engine, the new rear suspension and the refined aerodynamics: it was a beast, but my dad could tame it."
He continues: "He became one with the car. It gave him the confidence to push it to the limit without going beyond it.
"And now that I am also a racing driver, I understand how rare it is to find the right combination of instinct and engineering with the power to leave a mark on history."
Michael Schumacher hasn't been seen in public since suffering serious injuries in a skiing accident back in December 2013.









