CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Lindsey Vonn’s pursuit of an against-all-odds Olympic medal ended Sunday with a broken left leg following a devastating crash only 13.4 seconds into the downhill final.
Skiing in a brace just nine days after rupturing the ACL in her left knee, Vonn did not finish the final at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics. She was attempting to become the oldest Alpine skier, man or woman, to win an Olympic medal.
Under ideal, bluebird conditions at the craggy top of the famed Tofane course in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Vonn pushed off as the 13th woman to go down the 1.6-mile course, with 23 competitors waiting their turn behind her.
Vonn tapped her poles together three times before pulling out of the gate. Before reaching the first marker of the course, however, she crashed and tumbled, hitting her head in the process until coming to a merciful stop. Screams of pain could be heard on the broadcast.

The crowd waiting at the bottom of the hill, which included her family, fell eerily silent, with lips pursed and arms crossed.
Within minutes, medical personnel had surrounded Vonn and began securing her to a stretcher. Zipped into a red bag, Vonn was airlifted off the course. Half an hour after a buzzing crowd at the finish line had expected to see Vonn for the first time, they watched as a helicopter passed over their heads, airlifting her away.
Vonn broke her left leg and needed surgery to stabilize the injury, according to Luca Zaia, the regional governor. The Associated Press and Reuters also quoted the hospital as saying Vonn had surgery on the broken leg.
Vonn’s sister Karin Kildow said Vonn “put her whole heart” into making the Olympics.
“That’s definitely the last thing we wanted to see,” Kildow told NBC’s Cara Banks. “When that happens, you’re just immediately hoping she’s OK, and it was scary. When you start to see the stretchers being put out, it’s not a good sign.”
“She dared greatly, and she put it all out there.”
Kildow confirmed Vonn remains under medical evaluation and that the family has not heard anything beyond that. Team USA’s head speed coach Paul Kristofic said Vonn remained under medical evaluation in Cortina, with the team yet to hear any update on her condition.
“We don’t know anything really yet,” Kristofic told reporters. “She’s with a medical team in the hospital.”
“She’s getting evaluated right now in Cortina. And then, obviously, depending on the severeness of the injury, they’re going to make decisions where to put her.”
American Breezy Johnson took the early lead with her time of 1:36.1 as the sixth racer down the course, and it narrowly held up to earn a gold medal. The difference between gold and silver was just four-hundredths of a second. Johnson joins Vonn as the only other American woman to win Olympic downhill gold.
But the race will largely be remembered for Vonn.
The scene was difficult to square with the seemingly invincible show of strength — including finishing with the third-fastest time on Saturday in training — she had put on since injuring her knee just over a week earlier.
And the result was all the more brutal because the course is Vonn's favorite to race on.


