In her most candid interview since the harrowing incident that nearly cost her everything, Olympic champion Lindsey Vonn is embracing the mantra that has defined her extraordinary career: The only way is through.
The 41-year-old skiing icon, who staged a stunning comeback to compete at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, detailed the catastrophic crash, multiple life-saving surgeries, and her uncertain future in a revealing new profile. Just 13 seconds into her downhill run — a discipline where she had previously dominated with 12 wins on the famed Olimpia delle Tofane course — Vonn’s Olympic dream shattered in an instant.
“I was number one in the world, and potentially on my way to an Olympic medal,” Vonn told Vanity Fair. “Now I’m in a wheelchair.”
A Near-Fatal Moment on the Slopes
Vonn entered the Games riding high despite a torn ACL suffered just nine days earlier in Crans-Montana. She had qualified strongly and felt mentally primed. But a tiny error — pressing her outside ski too hard over a small lip on the course — caused her arm to catch a non-breakaway gate. Her skis failed to release, twisting her body violently as she cartwheeled down the mountain. Her screams, captured live on broadcast, echoed the severity of the impact.
Airlifted off the course, Vonn faced immediate chaos: paparazzi swarming medical tents, language barriers in the ICU, and unrelenting pain. Doctors diagnosed severe fractures to her tibia, fibula, and ankle, compounded by compartment syndrome — a condition where swelling threatened to cut off blood flow entirely, risking amputation.
Team USA physician Dr. Tom Hackett performed emergency fasciotomy surgery to save her leg, describing the swelling in graphic terms. Vonn underwent five surgeries in total. In the days that followed, she battled isolation, constant medical interventions, and the psychological toll of going from world-beater to patient in the blink of an eye.
Resilience Forged in Adversity
This is not Vonn’s first battle with injury. She retired in 2019 at age 33 after years of chronic pain, only to return years later thanks to a groundbreaking knee replacement. Her post-retirement life included successful business ventures, investments, and new passions — yet the pull of competition proved irresistible.
In the interview, Vonn reflects on her legacy: 82+ World Cup wins (a record at the time), multiple Crystal Globes, and Olympic hardware. She doesn’t want the crash to define her. “What I did before the Olympics has never been done before,” she emphasized.
Throughout her recovery in Park City, Utah — involving daily physical therapy, hyperbaric chamber sessions, and grueling gym work — Vonn has leaned on supporters, including messages from icons like Wayne Gretzky. Her social media posts, featuring determined workouts even amid heavy bandaging, have inspired fans worldwide.
What’s Next? Doors Remain Open
Ever the fighter, Vonn isn’t ready to close the book on skiing. “I don’t like to close the door on anything, because you just never know what’s going to happen,” she said. While the road to any potential return is long and uncertain, her mindset remains unchanged.
Vonn’s story is one of unparalleled grit. From Minnesota slopes as a child to global dominance and now this latest trial, she continues to prove that for champions like her, the only way forward — through pain, doubt, and seemingly insurmountable odds — is through.
As she navigates rehab and contemplates her future, one thing is clear: Lindsey Vonn’s competitive fire still burns. The world will be watching to see what she conquers next.
