American alpine skiing legend Lindsey Vonn saw her historic Olympic comeback end in a devastating high-speed crash during the women’s downhill at the Milan-Cortina Winter Games.
Just 13 seconds into her run on the iconic Olimpia delle Tofane course in Cortina d’Ampezzo, the 41-year-old clipped a gate with her right arm, losing balance and somersaulting off the track at approximately 70 mph. The race was halted for nearly 30 minutes as Vonn, whose screams of pain were audible on the live broadcast, was stabilized and airlifted by helicopter to a hospital in Treviso.
The Injury and “No Regrets”
The crash followed an audacious attempt by Vonn to compete despite having ruptured her ACL in a World Cup accident in Switzerland just nine days prior.
Medical Diagnosis: Following the Olympic crash, Vonn was diagnosed with a complex tibia fracture in her left leg. She underwent immediate orthopedic surgery and confirmed on February 10 that she will require “multiple surgeries” to fully repair the damage.
The “5-Inch” Mistake: In a statement from her hospital bed, Vonn clarified that her previous knee injuries did not cause the fall. “I was simply 5 inches too tight on my line when my right arm hooked inside of the gate,” she explained.
Resilience: Despite the outcome, Vonn stated she had no regrets about the comeback, noting that standing in the starting gate at age 41 was “a victory in and of itself.”
A Bittersweet Victory for Team USA
While the morning was darkened by Vonn’s injury, it ultimately became a historic day for American skiing as teammate Breezy Johnson captured the gold medal.
| Result | Athlete | Country | Time |
| Gold | Breezy Johnson | USA | 1:36.10 |
| Silver | Emma Aicher | Germany | 1:36.14 |
| Bronze | Sofia Goggia | Italy | 1:36.55 |
Johnson, who watched Vonn‘s evacuation in tears from the leader’s chair, became only the second American woman in history—after Vonn herself in 2010—to win the Olympic downhill title.






