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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Sean Ingle

Lindsey Vonn continues remarkable comeback with World Cup ski victory at 41

Lindsey Vonn celebrates winning an alpine ski, women's World Cup downhill in St. Moritz
Lindsey Vonn celebrates winning an alpine ski, women's World Cup downhill in San Moritz Photograph: Luciano Bisi/AP

Lindsey Vonn’s extraordinary ­comeback from retirement and ­serious knee surgery gathered pace on Friday when she became the oldest skier to win a World Cup race at the age of 41.

The American, who had not raced for five years until she returned to the ­circuit last year, destroyed the ­women’s downhill field in San Moritz to win by nearly a second.

It was Vonn’s first downhill victory for nearly eight years, and the first in her comeback with titanium implants in her right knee. The win ­establishes her as one of the ­favourites for the downhill in February’s Winter ­Olympics in Milan-Cortina, the event she won her only gold medal in, back in Vancouver in 2010.

“It was an amazing day, I couldn’t be happier, pretty emotional,” Vonn said. “I felt good this summer but I wasn’t sure how fast I was. I guess I know now how fast I am.”

Vonn secured her 44th career win in World Cup downhills – and her 83rd World Cup victory of her career – with a superb run with Austria’s Magdalena Egger 0.98sec back in second.

After her victory was confirmed, Vonn collapsed into the snow before thrusting her ski poles in the air to celebrate. It was the perfect start to her Olympic season and a first World Cup win since March 2018 at Are, Sweden.

“Obviously my goal is Cortina but if this is the way we start I think I’m in a good spot,” she said.

The American has another ­downhill on Saturday followed by a ­Super-G on Sunday – and the ominous news for her rivals is that she thinks there is still room for improvement.

“I still didn’t ski the best I could have on the compression on the ­bottom but I just tried to be dynamic, tried to be clean, the way I’ve been skiing in training and it was pretty solid,” she said.

“I’m really excited for Super-G because I’m ­skiing better in Super-G than I am in downhill.”

The previous oldest World Cup race winner was Switzerland’s ­Didier Cuche at 37 in a men’s Super-G in 2012. Italy’s Federica Brignone was the oldest previous female winner at 34 last season.

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