Olympic legend Lindsey Vonn is proving once again why she’s one of the toughest athletes on the planet. Just days after bravely sharing that her left leg came terrifyingly close to amputation following a horrific crash at the 2026 Winter Olympics, the 41-year-old skiing superstar is already back at it — pushing through intense rehabilitation with grit and gratitude.
In an inspiring Instagram video posted Thursday, March 5, Vonn shared raw footage of her early rehab sessions, set to the upbeat track “It’s a Great Day to Be Alive.” Dressed in a red workout set and still relying on a wheelchair, the three-time Olympic medalist is seen carefully performing upper-body lifts, core exercises, and even standing to put gentle weight on her heavily bandaged left leg.
“Definitely some hard times but still thankful… still working hard,” Vonn captioned the powerful clip. “The only goal is to get healthy. One day at a time.
The update comes exactly one week after Vonn’s emotional Feb. 23 video, where she revealed the full extent of her nightmare injury for the first time. After clipping a gate just 13 seconds into her Olympic downhill run on Feb. 8 in Milan Cortina, Italy, she suffered a catastrophic complex tibia fracture — with doctors describing her leg as “in pieces.” Complications from compartment syndrome (a dangerous buildup of pressure that cuts off blood flow) led to an emergency fasciotomy performed by Team USA orthopedic surgeon Dr. Tom Hackett.
“Dr. Tom Hackett saved my leg. He saved my leg from being amputated,” a tearful Vonn said in her earlier post. “He did what’s called a fasciotomy, where he cut open both sides of my leg and kind of filleted it open… let it breathe and, um, he saved me.”5ae488
Vonn endured multiple surgeries in Italy before flying home, describing the ordeal as “by far the most extreme and painful and challenging injury I’ve ever faced in my entire life times one hundred.” She also opened up about the mental toll, admitting to tough days where “everything just really hit me hard and I broke down,” but adding that small victories keep her going.
Despite the devastating setback — which also included a torn ACL she suffered just one week before the Games — Vonn has repeatedly said she has “no regrets” about competing. “I tried. I dreamt. I jumped,” she posted the day after the crash.
Now focused squarely on recovery, Vonn faces a long road: doctors estimate about a year for the bones in her leg to fully heal before any further procedures, including potential ACL repair. But true to form, the skiing icon is attacking rehab head-on, transitioning from wheelchair to crutches in the coming weeks.
Fans have flooded her comments with support, calling her journey “inspiring” and “unstoppable.” As one of the most decorated skiers in history, Vonn’s resilience is no surprise — but this latest update is proof that even in her darkest moments, she’s already writing the next chapter of her legendary story.
One day at a time, indeed. What an incredible fighter! 💪❤️
