Rafael Nadal Sends Message to Lindsey Vonn
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After a devastating crash just 13 seconds into her downhill run, Lindsey Vonn “sustained an injury” but is in stable condition, according to U.S. Ski & Snowboard. Sunday’s women’s downhill emerged as the most anticipated event in these Olympics,
Lindsey Vonn’s defiant bid to win the Winter Olympic downhill at the age of 41, on a rebuilt right knee and a badly injured left knee, ended Sunday in a frightening crash that left her with a broken leg and saw her taken to safety by a rescue helicopter for the second time in nine days.
When she tore her left ACL nine days ago in a spill in Switzerland, as she was lifted by helicopter off the mountain in her final race before the 2026 Milano Cortina Games, it seemed like these Olympics lost its biggest star. It seemed like Vonn's grand return from her 2019 retirement was over right before her biggest moment.
Lindsey Vonn's fall explained: A reverse banked section, an unfortunate bump and an inflated air bag
Marco Pastore, who works on the safety system for Dainese, said the air bag deflates after about 20 seconds, so that likely happened while Vonn was lying on the snow after her crash. Eventually, Dainese will try to retrieve a sort of “black box” sensor that could reveal data on the fall.