Tennis legend and outspoken commentator Rennae Stubbs has fiercely defended U.S. alpine skiing icon Lindsey Vonn against online speculation linking her devastating Winter Olympics crash to a recent torn ACL, calling out non-experts to “stop with the nonsense” and insisting the incident was purely a high-risk racing error.
Vonn, 41, suffered a complex tibia fracture in her left leg during Sunday’s women’s downhill on the Tofane slope, just 13 seconds into her run. After hooking a gate with her right arm, she lost balance and tumbled violently, requiring an airlift to hospital and initial surgery to stabilize the break, with multiple additional procedures expected.
The crash came nine days after Vonn tore her ACL in the same leg during a World Cup event in Crans-Montana — an injury she chose to race through with a brace. In her Monday Instagram post, Vonn herself stated unequivocally: “My ACL and past injuries had nothing to do with my crash whatsoever,” attributing it to being “5 inches too tight on my line.”
Stubbs, the former world No. 1 doubles player and ESPN analyst, took to X (formerly Twitter) to back Vonn’s account with sharp precision. In a viral thread, she wrote: “NON PRO ATHLETES! @lindseyvonn didnt crash today because of her knee, she crashed cause she took a hard line at the gate & her pole wrapped it & flung her sideways! She raced TWICE on the knee & finished 11th & 3rd in training! this was a ski racing accident not a lack of an ACL.”
Stubbs further emphasized Vonn’s pre-crash form: “She skied twice on it already & came 3rd yesterday in training! It was her hard line to the gate & her right pole wrapping her arm into! It had nothing to do with her knee! So stop with the nonsense!”
The comments, which garnered thousands of likes and shares, also addressed broader criticism questioning Vonn’s decision to compete at 41 with the injury, shutting down armchair experts and reinforcing that Olympic spots aren’t interchangeable once qualified.
Stubbs’ no-holds-barred support aligns with tributes from across sports, including messages from Chris Evert, Jannik Sinner, and Simone Biles, praising Vonn’s fearless spirit. Vonn, a three-time Olympic medalist and one of downhill’s all-time greats, has declared “no regrets” about her comeback attempt.
As Vonn begins a challenging recovery, Stubbs’ intervention has helped shift the conversation from blame to admiration for a champion who pushed the limits — proving once again that elite performance demands bold risks, not caution from the sidelines. The alpine community rallies behind her, with focus now on healing and her enduring legacy.
