Lindsey Vonn’s abrupt exit shocks Milan-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics
- February 10, 2026
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Lindsey Vonn’s dramatic crash at the Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina 2026 caused a complex fracture and reignited debate over risk in elite skiing.
Lindsey Vonn’s dramatic crash at the Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina 2026 caused a complex fracture and reignited debate over risk in elite skiing.
The Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina 2026 were shaken by one of their most dramatic moments when skiing legend Lindsey Vonn suffered a severe crash that ended her Olympic run and left her facing multiple surgeries.
The incident not only halted her long-awaited return to the Games but also reopened discussions about risk, longevity and decision-making in elite skiing.
The accident occurred on the Cortina d’Ampezzo course during the women’s downhill. Just 13 seconds after leaving the старт gate, Vonn lost control when her right arm caught one of the early gates.
The impact violently twisted her body and sent her crashing onto the slope, prompting immediate medical intervention and stunned silence among spectators. She was airlifted to Ca’ Foncello Hospital in Treviso, where doctors performed emergency orthopedic surgery.

Event organizers confirmed that the procedure aimed to stabilize a fracture in her left leg. While initial medical updates were cautious, Vonn later disclosed the severity of the injury herself, revealing a “complex tibial fracture” that would require multiple operations. A second surgery was carried out shortly afterward as part of the treatment plan.
The context made the crash even more striking. Just over a week earlier, Vonn had torn the anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee during training in Crans-Montana.
Despite that setback, she chose to compete, wearing a knee brace and insisting she felt little pain before the race. In her own words, she was adamant that the prior injury did not contribute to the fall.
“In alpine skiing, the difference between a strategic line and a catastrophic injury can be as little as 12.7 centimeters,” she wrote. Her explanation highlighted the razor-thin margins of the sport and underscored why even the most experienced athletes remain vulnerable.
Vonn’s career statistics remain extraordinary: 84 World Cup victories, 45 downhill wins and 11 major championship medals, including Olympic gold. Her return to the Games, 24 years after her Olympic debut, had been one of the most anticipated storylines of Milan-Cortina 2026. Instead, her abrupt exit became one of its defining images.
Así se acaba la historia de 🇺🇸 Lindsey Vonn.
— José Manuel Amorós (@AmorosLive) February 8, 2026
Evacuada sobrevolando los grandes picos de los Dolomitas italianos en una imagen para la historia marcada por el respeto del público.
Más allá de opiniones de lo que ha pasado estos días, una leyenda.
pic.twitter.com/b2k3iKWRfO
In a reflective post following surgery, Vonn acknowledged the pain and disappointment but expressed no regret. Competing itself, she said, was a victory. She also reminded fans that risk is inseparable from both sport and life, a message that resonated far beyond the slopes.