At just nine years old, Lindsey Vonn declared her bold plan: she was going to become an Olympian. Decades later, with three Olympic medals (one gold in downhill and two bronzes), a record-shattering 82 World Cup victories, four overall World Cup titles, and a legacy as one of the greatest alpine skiers ever, that little girl from Minnesota hasn’t changed. She still feels most at home screaming down a mountain at breakneck speeds.
In her raw, first-person essay “I’m Still Lindsey” published by The Players’ Tribune on January 28, 2026, Vonn opens up about the fire that has defined her life — the one that turned a childhood dream into a history-making career and keeps pulling her back even after retirement, devastating injuries, and a titanium knee.
Born Lindsey Caroline Kildow in St. Paul, Minnesota, Vonn was on skis by age two, thanks to her father (a former junior champion) and grandfather. She trained at Buck Hill and moved to Vail, Colorado, at 12 to chase bigger slopes. By her teens, she was already turning heads internationally. She debuted at the Olympics in 2002 at age 17 in Salt Lake City, competed in four Games total, and delivered her signature performance in Vancouver 2010: becoming the first American woman to win Olympic downhill gold while snagging bronze in super-G. Her third medal came in 2018 at PyeongChang with another downhill bronze.
But Vonn’s story isn’t just about the podiums. It’s a tale of relentless grit through pain. She battled multiple knee injuries, including missing the 2014 Sochi Games, and retired in 2019 after amassing 82 World Cup wins — a women’s record at the time — along with eight World Championship medals.
The fire never fully went out. In late 2025, at age 41 and with a partially titanium knee, Vonn staged an improbable comeback. She returned to the World Cup, notched podiums, won races (including becoming the oldest World Cup winner ever), and briefly reclaimed the No. 1 ranking in downhill. Heading into the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, she was defying age and expectations once again.
Then came the heartbreak. Just days before the Games, she ruptured her ACL in a training crash. Undeterred, she competed anyway in the women’s downhill — pushing through with a brace — only to suffer a terrifying high-speed fall that resulted in a complex tibia fracture (and reportedly nearly cost her the leg). She was airlifted off the mountain, underwent multiple surgeries, and has been open about the long recovery while expressing zero regrets.
In the Players’ Tribune piece, Vonn reflects on that unbreakable pull: the mountain is where she feels most alive, where the girl with the big Olympic dream still lives inside the champion. Even after stepping away for six years to explore life off the slopes — including business ventures, a memoir, and investing in women’s soccer — she couldn’t stay gone for good.
Now, as she continues rehab and keeps the door cracked open for whatever comes next (“I don’t like to close the door on anything”), Vonn’s story resonates as pure inspiration. It’s not just about medals or records. It’s about passion that outlasts injuries, age, and even retirement announcements.
From the gentle hills of Minnesota to the world’s most demanding downhills, Lindsey Vonn proved that a childhood vision, backed by ferocious determination, can carve out a legendary path. And at her core? She’s still the same Lindsey — most at home when she’s flying down the mountain.
Whether this marks the final chapter or another comeback remains to be seen. One thing is certain: the world will be watching wherever her skis take her next.
