Lindsey Vonn Looking To Compete In Milan Cortina Winter Olympics Following Injury Scare
There are comeback stories, and then there are “Wait, she’s doing what?” stories. Lindsey Vonn, the 41-year-old skiing legend who apparently treats retirement like a mild suggestion rather than a lifestyle, is giving us the latter.
Despite completely rupturing her ACL in a crash just days ago in Switzerland, Vonn announced Tuesday that she is “confident” she’ll be in the starting gate for the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.
A Knee Brace and a Dream
Speaking from Cortina d’Ampezzo, a place where she has won so often they should probably just name a run after her, Vonn dropped the news that would send most mortals straight to the couch with an ice pack and a Netflix subscription.
“I had a feeling it was bad, but I held out hope until I saw the MRI,” Vonn said. But instead of tears, she went into problem-solving mode. After three days of intense physical therapy and some serious conversations with doctors, she strapped on a brace and tested the leg on Tuesday.
Her verdict? “It feels stable, it feels strong.” It is a bold statement for someone walking around with a knee that’s structurally compromised. But Vonn isn’t operating on normal human logic; she’s operating on “Greatest of All Time” logic. She noted that scientifically, you don’t lose muscle strength in just a few days, so as long as the swelling stays down and the brace does its job, she believes she can ski.
The Comeback That Refuses To Quit
Let’s rewind for a second. Vonn retired in 2019 because her body was essentially screaming at her to stop. She got a partial knee replacement in 2024 just to live a pain-free life. But then she felt so good she thought, “Why not try the Olympics again?”
Her return this season has been nothing short of cinematic. At 40, with a titanium implant in her right knee, she was leading the downhill standings. She was reminding everyone why she owns 84 World Cup wins. Then came the crash in Crans-Montana.
It looked like the end. It should have been the end. But Vonn is apparently allergic to the concept of “giving up.” “I’m not letting this slip through my fingers,” she said. “I’m going to do it. End of story.”
What’s Next For Vonn?
The plan is simple, yet terrifying. Vonn intends to race in the downhill on Sunday. That is her main target. The Super-G and the team combined events are “maybe’s,” depending on how the knee holds up after the downhill training runs.
The women’s downhill training starts Thursday. That will be the real test. It is one thing to feel stable while standing at a press conference; it’s another to feel stable absorbing G-forces on an injected sheet of ice.
But this is Vonn. She won Olympic gold in 2010 with a bruised shin. She’s won World Cup races with broken fingers and torn ligaments. If anyone can tape themselves together and pull off a miracle in Cortina, it’s her.
