Latest news with #LindseyVonn

Reuters
3 days ago
- Health
- Reuters
Skier Lindsey Vonn ‘feels amazing' in Olympic comeback at 40
Lindsey Vonn, the American skier making a bid to get back to the Olympics at age 40, said Wednesday (May 21) that her body felt better than it did seven years earlier when she last competed at the Games.

Associated Press
7 days ago
- Business
- Associated Press
Serena Williams awarded Spain's Princess of Asturias Prize for Sports
MADRID (AP) — Serena Williams has been awarded Spain's Princess of Asturias Prize for Sports for her stellar tennis career, organizers said Wednesday. The 43-year-old American won 73 career singles titles including 23 Grand Slams. She said in 2022 that she was stepping away from tennis to focus on her family and business interests. The 50,000-euro ($57,000) Princess of Asturias Award is one of eight annual prizes covering different areas, including arts, literature and science among others. The awards ceremony, presided over by Spain's Princess Leonor, takes place each fall in the northern city of Oviedo. Past winners of the sports prize include skier Lindsey Vonn, the IOC Refugee Olympic Team and the New Zealand rugby team. ___ More AP tennis:

Kuwait Times
23-05-2025
- Sport
- Kuwait Times
Vonn, Shiffrin glad to race Olympics on familiar terrain
LOS ANGELES: Record-breaking downhill skier Lindsey Vonn said the choice of Cortina d'Ampezzo for the women's races at the 2025 Milan Winter Olympic was her main motivation for coming out of retirement. The former Olympic and world champion stunned the sports world when she returned to the US ski team last year aged 40, five years after retirement. Vonn's retirement followed a serious knee injury but after she underwent a titanium reconstruction of her knee, she opted to return. And she told AFP that the prospect of competing for gold at the course in the Italian Dolomites was her primary motivator. 'It was probably the biggest reason why I came back — because it was in Cortina. I don't know if I would have come back if the Olympics hadn't been in Cortina,' she said. 'It's always been historically a great place for me. It's where I got my first podium, where I broke the Women's World Cup win record, and I think it would be a really fitting place to end my career again. It's definitely been the carrot that's been dangling in front of me,' she said. Vonn picked up the first podium of her return at Sun Valley in March, finishing second behind Switzerland's Lara Gut-Behrami in a World Cup Super-G race. It was a sweet reward for her efforts after she had faced some criticism for taking the risks on the snow after such a long absence. 'The comeback season was incredible. A lot of amazing experiences. Sun Valley was definitely the best way to end it,' said Vonn, who was speaking at an NBC event previewing the Winter Games. 'It gives me a lot of confidence going into next season. But it was definitely up and down, some low points, and some really amazing experiences. 'So I think I learned a lot. I know what I have to do next year. I think, hopefully, people understand now my capabilities, and I think the conversation will be hopefully a little different next year than it was this year,' she added. Vonn won her Olympic gold medal in downhill in Vancouver in 2010, a year after clinching World Championship gold at Val d'Isere. Beautiful place Her team-mate Mikaela Shiffrin, who endured a nightmare Olympics in Beijing in 2022, said she was also glad that a well known European venue had been chosen for the next Games. 'It's a beautiful place and it's a place that we're more familiar with on the Alpine side. And that feels really good to go to a place where we have some knowledge,' she told AFP. 'We can talk about the Olympic planning and we can imagine what it's maybe going to look like because we've been there, we've seen it. And so that's going to be, I think, a really nice thing to go to a place that feels, for me in a way, it feels like home. Because I spent so much of my life in Europe now that it's like, OK, here we are. We know,' she said. Shiffrin, who has the most World Cup wins of any skier in history, won gold in slalom in Sochi in 2014 as an 18-year-old and then triumphed in giant slalom in Pyeongchang four years later. But in Beijing she failed to finish in either of her favoured events and left without a medal. 'I think what I realized from the Olympics is there's always something new around the corner. And when I thought I experienced everything after South Korea, then Beijing came and changed everything I knew about the Olympics,' she said. 'It just gave me experience of how hard and upsetting this kind of event can be when everything does go kind of wrong,' she said. 'I think that the best approach is like, do the best we can, and I'll be prepared and I'll practice and be ready to go. And then what happens, happens, but life goes on,' she said. — AFP


Japan Times
22-05-2025
- Sport
- Japan Times
Lindsey Vonn feeling 'amazing' ahead of bid to make U.S. Olympic team at age 40
Lindsey Vonn, who is making a bid to get back to the Olympics at age 40, said Wednesday that her body felt better than it did seven years earlier when she last competed at the Winter Games. Vonn said a partial knee replacement last year helped her overall fitness and enabled her to seek a spot on the U.S. ski team for the Milano Cortina Olympics in February 2026. "My body feels amazing," Vonn said at an event hosted by U.S. Olympic broadcaster NBCUniversal. "Now that my knee is good again, I don't have any of the other problems," she added. "So my back's great. My body feels good. I feel better than I did in the last Olympics, by a lot actually." Vonn, who boasts 82 World Cup wins and counts one gold among her three Olympic medals, had retired in February 2019. In November 2024, Vonn announced she was planning a comeback. She earned a second-place finish in the super-G at the Women's World Cup Finals in March. "I have done everything I wanted to do in my career. This is not something that I ever expected," Vonn said of seeking to compete at the next Olympics. "I'm going in looking to enjoy the experience, looking to be at a place that I love, that I've had a lot of success at," she added. Climate change has prompted concerns about whether the Italian ski town of Cortina will have enough snow during the Games. Vonn said she was not worried about the conditions. "Cortina has historically been so good at making a perfect racetrack, whether it's man-made or natural snow," she said. "No matter what the condition, it will be pristine. I am 100% sure of that." American snowboarder Chloe Kim, who is chasing a third gold medal, also said she was preparing to handle any conditions. "I've competed in blizzards, no snow, too much snow, windy, too warm where the snow gets really slushy and grippy," Kim said. "I've been doing this since I was four years old. Hopefully those skills will get me through."
Yahoo
22-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Vonn and Shiffrin glad to race Olympics on familiar terrain
Record-breaking downhill skier Lindsey Vonn said the choice of Cortina d'Ampezzo for the women's races at the 2025 Milan Winter Olympic was her main motivation for coming out of retirement. The former Olympic and world champion stunned the sports world when she returned to the US ski team last year aged 40, five years after retirement. Vonn's retirement followed a serious knee injury but after she underwent a titanium reconstruction of her knee, she opted to return. And she told AFP that the prospect of competing for gold at the course in the Italian Dolomites was her primary motivator. "It was probably the biggest reason why I came back -- because it was in Cortina. I don't know if I would have come back if the Olympics hadn't been in Cortina," she said. "It's always been historically a great place for me. It's where I got my first podium, where I broke the Women's World Cup win record, and I think it would be a really fitting place to end my career again. It's definitely been the carrot that's been dangling in front of me," she said. Vonn picked up the first podium of her return at Sun Valley in March, finishing second behind Switzerland's Lara Gut-Behrami in a World Cup Super-G race. It was a sweet reward for her efforts after she had faced some criticism for taking the risks on the snow after such a long absence. "The comeback season was incredible. A lot of amazing experiences. Sun Valley was definitely the best way to end it," said Vonn, who was speaking at an NBC event previewing the Winter Games. "It gives me a lot of confidence going into next season. But it was definitely up and down, some low points, and some really amazing experiences. "So I think I learned a lot. I know what I have to do next year. I think, hopefully, people understand now my capabilities, and I think the conversation will be hopefully a little different next year than it was this year," she added. Vonn won her Olympic gold medal in downhill in Vancouver in 2010, a year after clinching World Championship gold at Val d'Isere. - Beautiful place - Her team-mate Mikaela Shiffrin, who endured a nightmare Olympics in Beijing in 2022, said she was also glad that a well known European venue had been chosen for the next Games. "It's a beautiful place and it's a place that we're more familiar with on the Alpine side. And that feels really good to go to a place where we have some knowledge," she told AFP. "We can talk about the Olympic planning and we can imagine what it's maybe going to look like because we've been there, we've seen it. And so that's going to be, I think, a really nice thing to go to a place that feels, for me in a way, it feels like home. Because I spent so much of my life in Europe now that it's like, OK, here we are. We know," she said. Shiffrin, who has the most World Cup wins of any skier in history, won gold in slalom in Sochi in 2014 as an 18-year-old and then triumphed in giant slalom in Pyeongchang four years later. But in Beijing she failed to finish in either of her favoured events and left without a medal. "I think what I realized from the Olympics is there's always something new around the corner. And when I thought I experienced everything after South Korea, then Beijing came and changed everything I knew about the Olympics," she said. "It just gave me experience of how hard and upsetting this kind of event can be when everything does go kind of wrong," she said. "I think that the best approach is like, do the best we can, and I'll be prepared and I'll practice and be ready to go. And then what happens, happens, but life goes on," she said. rg/sev/nl/des