In a display of unbreakable grit, skiing icon Lindsey Vonn is fighting back from the brink—just weeks after a horrifying crash at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics nearly cost her left leg.
The 41-year-old Olympic champion, who made a stunning comeback from retirement to compete in the women’s downhill, crashed early in her run on February 8, suffering a complex tibia fracture, broken ankle, and severe compartment syndrome that required emergency fasciotomy surgery to prevent amputation. Doctors credited quick intervention by Team USA orthopedic surgeon Dr. Tom Hackett with saving her limb after the injury left it “shattered” and under extreme pressure.
After multiple surgeries in Italy—including four initial procedures—and a hospital stay that kept her bedridden and unable to stand for over a week, Vonn returned home to the U.S. in early March. Now, in a powerful new rehab video shared on social media, the legend is back in the gym with her heavily bandaged leg still bearing the scars of surgery.
The footage captures raw determination: Vonn grimaces through pain as she performs basic exercises, struggles to stand independently, and works her core with a medicine ball—all while her repaired limb trembles under the strain. Yet she pushes on, one rep at a time, embodying quiet resilience.
“If my leg can still fight… then so can I,” she declares in the clip, turning what could have ended her career—and far worse—into a testament of perseverance.
Vonn has been open about the grueling road ahead, describing “hard days,” mental battles, and the reality that full healing could take a year or more. But her early return to movement has inspired fans worldwide, proving that even after defying odds to race at 41 (despite a prior ACL tear), she’s not done defying gravity—or gravity’s consequences.
This isn’t just recovery; it’s defiance. Every small step Vonn takes is a reminder of the human spirit’s power to rebound from the edge. As she focuses on getting healthy “one day at a time,” the skiing world watches in awe—and cheers louder than ever.