Just weeks after a terrifying crash that left her fighting to save her leg, skiing queen Lindsey Vonn is back home and rolling into recovery the only way she knows how: with her adorable Cavalier King Charles Spaniel puppy, Chance, right by her side.
In a heart-melting video shared on social media Thursday, the 41-year-old Olympic champion took her first breath of fresh air in more than a month — zipping around outside her Park City home on a tiny electric scooter, medical boot still locked on, bundled against the Utah cold. Trotting happily beside her? Chance, keeping perfect pace like the ultimate four-legged cheerleader.
“Look out world! Here we come… was my first time outside in over a month!” Vonn captioned the clip, and fans instantly flooded the comments with fire emojis and “you got this” messages.
The moment feels small — but after what she’s been through, it’s massive.
Flash back to February 8 in Cortina d’Ampezzo. Seconds into her downhill run at the 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympics, Vonn clipped a gate, launched off a jump, and slammed into the icy slope. The damage was brutal: complex tibia fracture, shattered fibular head, tibial plateau blowout, broken ankle, and acute compartment syndrome that had doctors staring down amputation. Five emergency surgeries, a fasciotomy to save the leg, blood transfusions, and two weeks in a Milan hospital later, she finally flew home.
And just to twist the knife, her beloved longtime dog Leo lost his battle with lung cancer — one day after her crash.
Yet here she is, already reclaiming tiny pieces of normal life with her new furry sidekick.
The comeback questions are already swirling. Retirement rumors exploded mid-March after the brutal injury at age 41. Vonn shut them down hard, declaring she alone will decide her future — and she’s not closing any doors yet.
Doctors say full recovery will take many more months of grinding rehab. No timelines, no promises. But this scooter ride with Chance? It’s proof the fire still burns.
One small scoot at a time, the legend is moving forward — and the whole world is watching.
