The skier, 41, spoke out about the heartbreaking crash in a new cover interview with ‘Vanity Fair’
Lindsey Vonn is sharing new details about her Olympics heartbreak.
In the cover story for Vanity Fairâs May 2026 issue, released on Thursday, March 26, the Olympian spoke out for the first time about her mental and physical health, weeks after suffering a serious injury that nearly led to her losing her leg.
“I was number one in the world, and potentially on my way to an Olympic medal,â Vonn told the outlet. âNow Iâm in a wheelchair.â
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Vonn â who says she was âready to goâ and âin the exact mental stateâ that she âwanted to be inâ before the Olympics, despite tearing the ACL in her left knee nine days prior â explained that she had a whole strategy planned for the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics before the accident.
There was a small lip before a gate in the early section of the women’s downhill course, the outlet states, adding that athletes would usually be pushed to the left while turning over it. However, Vonn ended up going over it too fast, pressuring her outside ski too hard. Her arm then caught one of the gateâs poles, per Vanity Fair.
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Vonnâs coach, Aksel Lund Svindal, told the outlet, âIt was a very, very small error. Weâre talking about a few centimeters [but] she paid a high price.â
âMy leg was broken. My skis were still on. My leg was torqued, and I couldnât get my skis off. I couldnât move, and I was yelling for help,â Vonn recalled, adding, âI just needed someone to take my skis off.â
Describing being given painkillers and taken for a CT scan, Vonn said, âHalfway through, I started sweating. I was just in such extreme pain. I screamed at the top of my lungs: Get me out. It just wouldnât dissipate. It wouldnât let up. Itâs seared into my brain.â
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At one point, Vonnâs leg started to swell and wouldnât stop. Tom Hackett, the head physician for Team USA Ski and Snowboard, said Vonn was experiencing full-blown compartment syndrome. Vanity Fair notes that the condition is âwhere pressure mounts in the leg, restricting blood flow and causing widespread nerve damage.”
âDr. Hackett was on my left. There were a bunch of doctors and nurses around me,â Vonn remembers. âHe said, âDonât worry, Iâm going to save your leg. I got this. Iâm scrubbing in.â â
Despite the amount of attention that the crash received, Vonn doesnât want the incident to be her legacy.
âI donât want people to hang on this crash and be remembered for that,â she told the magazine. âWhat I did before the Olympics has never been done before. I was number one in the standings. No one remembers that I was winning.â
Vonn also opened up about her future and a potential retirement, insisting that she won’t âclose the door on anything, because you just never know whatâs going to happen.â
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Vonn told the outlet, âItâs hard to tell with this injury. Itâs so f—ed up. I really feel like that was a horrible last run to end my career on.â
âI only made it 13 seconds. But they were a really good 13 seconds,â she says of the women’s downhill event in which she was injured.
In the weeks since her crash, Vonn has given fans and followers a firsthand look at her recovery, from her time in an Italian hospital to flying back to the States to getting acclimated to a new routine at home in a scooter. Vonn has also shared behind-the-scenes moments of her intense rehab and workout sessions.
The star has also been outspoken about her mindset post-injury and hasnât been shy to clap back at commenters, some of whom questioned her even competing in the Games, having ruptured her ACL less than two weeks prior.
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âNo, Iâm not ready to discuss my future in skiing,â Vonn wrote in a post on Sunday, March 15. âMy focus has been on recovering from my injury and getting back to normal life. I was already retired for 6 years and have an amazing life outside of skiing. It was incredible to be #1 in the world again at 41 years old and set new records in my sport, but at my age, Iâm the only one that will decide my future.”
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Through it all, she has also credited her support system, including her sister Karin Kildow, who is also recovering from a knee injury at the same time.
Earlier this week, Vonn also looked back on the impact her late mother, Lindy Anne Lund, had on her life.
âWish you could have been here this year,â Vonn wrote in a post on Instagram alongside a video of Lund, who died in August 2022 at the age of 70, a year after she was diagnosed with ALS. âI donât know if you would be more proud now than you were at the 2018 Olympics when I got bronzeâŠ. But I would really love to know.â


