Lindsey Vonn says Olympic comeback is fueled by

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Lindsey Vonn says Olympic comeback is fueled by | College News


When Lindsey Vonn retired from Alpine snowboarding in 2019, she walked away from the game as one of the most profitable skiers in historical past. Six years later she’s coming back, with her sights set on competing in a fifth Winter Olympics in February in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy.

But regardless of how that comeback ends, Vonn isn’t frightened about it detracting from what she’s already achieved.

“This is different because I had nothing to prove,” said Vonn, 41, who climbed a World Cup podium for the first time since 2019 when she completed second at the super-G season finals in Sun Valley, Idaho, last March.

“I don’t think anyone remembers Michael Jordan’s comeback. I don’t think that’s part of his legacy at all,” she continued. “I’ve already succeeded. I’ve already won. I was on the podium. I have the record for the oldest medalist in World Cup by seven years [she set the previous record in 2019]. I feel like this journey has been incredible.”

American Lindsey Vonn poses in 2019 with medals she has received throughout her profession in the end space at the alpine ski world championships in Are, Sweden.

(Marco Trovati / Associated Press)

Vonn has three Olympic medals, but she received her only gold 15 years in the past. She’s received eight World Championship medals, but just one since 2017; her last gold got here in 2009. But the comeback isn’t so a lot about rekindling that past as it is about shoring up the current.

“I closed my career, and I definitely would like to close that chapter in maybe a better way than I did in 2019,” said Vonn, who was talking Tuesday at the U.S. Olympic Committee’s Media Summit in Manhattan. “I feel like I am happy, free. I’m doing it because I love it. I’m not doing to prove anything to anyone.”

Vonn missed the 2014 Winter Games with a proper knee injury, an injury that led to her retirement in 2019. But after partial knee-replacement surgical procedure last yr, she determined she wasn’t executed with snowboarding yet.

“After the replacement, I knew things were really different,” she said. “My body felt so good, and I just kind of kept pushing myself further and further to see what I was capable of. Skiing and racing seemed like the logical next step.”

American Lindsey Vonn skis during a women's super-G run at the World Cup finals on March 23 in Sun Valley, Idaho.

American Lindsey Vonn skis during a girls’s super-G run at the World Cup finals on March 23 in Sun Valley, Idaho.

(Robert F. Bukaty / Associated Press)

She’s a different skiier than she was when first began competing internationally 20 years in the past, she said.

“I have a lot more perspective now, having been away from the sport for six years,” she said. “That just allows me to compete in a different way and I think that gives me an advantage actually.

“Downhill skiing has a lot to do with with accumulated knowledge. And I’ve obviously accumulated a lot of knowledge, because I’ve raced for a very long time.”

Vonn, whose comeback landed her on the quilt of this week’s Time magazine, said she’s in the best form of her profession. But she still must earn enough factors on this winter’s World Cup circuit to qualify for the Olympics.

She said she most likely wouldn’t have thought of racing at a top degree again if next February’s Games weren’t schedule for Cortina, where’s received a file 12 profession World Cup races. She also recorded her first of 138 World Cup podiums in Cortina in 2004.

“My goal has always been Cortina again. It’s such a special place for me,” she said.

American Lindsey Vonn speeds down the course during an alpine ski women's World Cup downhill race.

American Lindsey Vonn speeds down the course during an alpine ski girls’s World Cup downhill race in Kvitfjell, Norway, on Feb. 28.

(Gabriele Facciotti / Associated Press)

“I didn’t want to set that as a goal, because I didn’t know if I would even be able to compete, let alone qualify or finish the season. Once I trained more and I got in better shape, I said to myself that this is an attainable goal. I can do this.”

And if she will be able to’t, that received’t detract from the fact that she tried. Or from what she’s already achieved.

“I’m at peace with where I am in my life,” she said. “I don’t need to be ski racing, but I definitely love to ski race and have nothing to prove. So I don’t feel like I have a lot of pressure, even though my dad says it’s the most pressure I’ve ever had in my whole life.”


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