Lindsey Vonn plans to compete despite a ruptured ACL

Sylvia

Flight #5342: I Will Remember You
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Lindsey Vonn, 41, gave a press conference today:
Training sessions for the women's downhill are set for Thursday, Friday and Saturday before Sunday's run for gold — and Vonn promised she'll be in the starting gate.
"I know what my chances were before the crash and I know my chances aren’t the same as it stands today," she told reporters.
"But I know there’s still a chance, and as long as there’s a chance, I will try."
"I am not letting this slip through my fingers," she said. "I’m not crying. My head is high, I’m standing tall and I’m going to do my best and whatever the result is."
The swelling is down and she's not in any pain, Vonn said.
"I have to take it day by day. My goal is obviously right now the downhill," said Vonn, who did not commit to racing in the super-G which is set for Feb. 12.
"I have to see how it feels. If it’s stable and I feel confident, I’ll continue to race. That is my goal, obviously, but I can’t tell you that answer until I actually ski 80 mph and then I’ll tell you."
 
Sad that she is injured; however, I would be unhappy if I was the alternate on the team. I can’t believe she’s going to be 100 percent ready.
 
Sad that she is injured; however, I would be unhappy if I was the alternate on the team. I can’t believe she’s going to be 100 percent ready.
this is similar to what i was thinking like you're telling me you have a torn acl and you just want to vibe your way through it??

ok i guess but also lowkey i'd be kind of mad hahaha
 
Sad that she is injured; however, I would be unhappy if I was the alternate on the team. I can’t believe she’s going to be 100 percent ready.
If I'm not mistaken, skiing has a different qualification process, so I'm not sure that Vonn would be replaced by another American. But, yeah, I'd be annoyed if I was the next on the list to get her spot and I wasn't already an Olympian.
 
Lindsey Vonn article by Tim Layden (formerly of Sports Illustrated) for NBC Olympics:
Excerpt:
The essential background here: Less than two years ago at a hospital in Florida, Vonn underwent a robot-assisted partial replacement of her right knee, keeping an appointment she had made with herself years earlier. She was 39 years old and five years removed from her — seemingly — final World Cup Ski race, which she contested with bruised ribs, a neck strain and black eye from a fall two days before, a fitting portrait. She said afterward that she was retiring not because her competitive desire and ski racing skills were gone, but because, "My body is broken." She was tired of the pain that impacted not just her skiing, but her life. (And to be sensible here, it's not like she was cheated out of a long career; she is the oldest women's Alpine medalist in history — 33 when she won a bronze in 2018 in PyeongChang — and raced for 19 years, well more than half her life at the time of her first retirement. Her career was long enough, it just wasn't healthy enough.)
Vonn came out of the surgery revitalized, pain-free for the first time in many years. When I interviewed her about all of this a year ago, she said, "The plan was to get my life back, basically. I really didn't think about a comeback at all."
That changed. The knee felt better than Vonn had imagined. She has maintained that she did not go into the surgery with a comeback in mind, but as I wrote last year after talking at length with Vonn (for at least the fifth time in our respective careers), "her mind wandered, as minds do." In 2023, Vonn had become the first woman to ski the legendary Streif in Kitzbuehel, Austria, site of the annual men's Hahnenkamm downhill, feared as the gnarliest hill on the circuit. Vonn skied it brilliantly, and fearlessly, on borrowed skis and old boots, and even though her right knee blew up afterward, a seed was planted. She could still do this, even if only once. When surgery took away her pain, that memory propelled her forward into an unexplored world: Humans have done many remarkable things on full and partial knee replacements, but until the last year-plus of Vonn's life, none had competed at the highest level of ski racing, hurtling down mountains at highway speed.
[...]
Her season has been called a comeback, but that is insufficient. Consider: Vonn was 34 when she retired, old for an Alpine ski racer, and she was damaged. Then she was in retirement for five years, walking red carpets and F1 starting grids, an exciting life that does not overlap with ski racing. She had moved on, and that time off alone should have slammed the door on any return. And now she races with titanium and plastic having replaced the mottled bone and lost cartilage on the outside of her right knee, far out in the medical wilderness. She has been so good that it all seems normal, but it is not. It is mind-boggling.
 
Apparently, her ortho guru removed her ACL and she did her mandatory practice run today. Not pushing for speed, but to test the course and her knee. ((((knees))) But, she's going for it and I'm :cheer2: her all the way. You've got to do what you've got to do at age 39.
 
Apparently, her ortho guru removed her ACL and she did her mandatory practice run today. Not pushing for speed, but to test the course and her knee. ((((knees))) But, she's going for it and I'm :cheer2: her all the way. You've got to do what you've got to do at age 39.
She's actually 41.
 
Where is the outcry from people asking her to step aside and allow an alternate the chance?
This is what fellow teammate Breezy Johnson said:


"There will be 6 Americans running the Downhill training runs and if Lindsey cannot compete... or doesn't feel competitive enough others can take her place," Johnson wrote in a response on Threads.

Johnson added, "But more athletes have competed without an ACL than you think. They just often don't talk about it because they don't want to hear about it from the peanut gallery."

So it's not like figure skating with a limited number of slots and alternatives who would need to be flown, but more like swimming with a team that can substitute in as needed. Which is good since Vonn crashed today and it out for future events like the Super G.

And, apparently, a competitor without an ACL isn't a unicorn. Which, tbh, I believe based on fellow triathletes who have torn ACLs and wait to get them treated and still compete (though not at a World level). Here's an article about it.

 
I do feel kind of bad that Vonn's career had to end that way, with her being carried off the course in serious pain. She really has been an icon of the sport, and I don't expect to see her as a competitor again. :cry:
 

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