Lindsey
Vonn
Date of birth | 18 October 1984 |
|---|---|
Place of birth | Saint Paul, Minnesota |
Age | 41 |
Nationality | United States |
Career start | 2002 |
Disciplines | Alpine Skiing Combined / Alpine Skiing Downhill / Alpine Skiing Giantslalom / Alpine Skiing Super G |
Lindsey Vonn’s name is synonymous with dominance in alpine skiing. Known for her fearless approach and record-breaking career, she’s inspired countless fans and athletes worldwide. Now, five years after retiring with 82 World Cup victories, three Olympic medals and eight FIS Alpine Skiing World Championship podiums, Vonn is stepping back into her ski boots.
Her decision to retire in 2019 came after 18 years of pushing her body to the limit in pursuit of true skiing greatness. By the age of 18 Lindsey had already won three downhill World Cups and the milestone achievements she accomplished from then on are astonishing.
After winning her first overall World Cup title in 2008, Lindsey became the first American woman to win back-to-back titles and then went on the score a hat-trick of overall crystal globes during the 2010 season when also made history as the first American women to win Olympic gold in Vancouver. As an a added bonus she also skied to a bronze medal in the Super-G. She missed out a fourth overall World Cup in 2011 by just three points, but in 2012, thanks to her first giant slalom win, she became only the eighth woman ever to win a World Cup in each alpine discipline.
The 2012-13 season Lindsey suffered the first of two major knee injuries in career, tearing her ACL and MCL in a crash at the World Championships, but such was her early-season dominance of the downhill field that she still won that World Cup crown for the sixth time.
Unfortunately, repeated aggravation of her ACL injury led to Lindsey missing almost all of 2014. Showing not only her greatness but also her gritty determination, she shrugged off her lack of a cruciate ligament to come back and deliver a mighty record-breaking 2014–15 season, breaking Austrian Annemarie Moser-Pröll's 35-year-old record for the most World Cup wins ever when she won her 63rd race in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy.
As she pushed the speed of women's downhill racing further and further over the years, it wasn’t just an astonishing amount of wins that Lindsey racked-up, but more major injuries as well. Eventually, following an incredible 82 World Cup race wins (a record only fellow American Mikaela Shiffrin has beaten), 137 podiums, four overall titles, eight World Championships medals and three Olympic medals, she announced her retirement on February 1, 2019.
“It’s been an emotional two weeks making the hardest decision of my life, but I have accepted that I cannot continue ski racing," Lindsey said at the time. "I will compete at the World Championships next week in Åre, Sweden, and they will be the final races of my career.”
In true Lindsey style, she took her final bow after breaking more records, the then 34 year old becoming the oldest woman to win a medal at a world championship and the first female racer to win medals at six different world championships
Post retirement, Lindsey continued to push boundaries by becoming the first women to ski the famed and feared Streif downhill, but no one, Lindsey included, expected to see her back racing on the World Cup circuit.
All that changed in November 2024, however. Following weeks of rumour, it was officially announced that Lindsey will rejoin the Stifel US Ski Team for the 2024-25 season after a partial knee-replacement surgery in April 2024 enabled her to ski without pain for the first time in many years. Her first comeback race happened the following month in St Moritz, Switzerland, where an encouraging performance saw her place 14th.
Lindsey continued to work hard on her comeback throughout the 2024-25 season, with encouraging results and setbacks all taken in her stride as she strove to improve race on race. She eventually gained the tangible reward her dedication deserved towards the end of the World Cup season. At the final Super-G race of the season in Sun Valley, Idaho, she finished a brilliant second behind Swiss star Lara Gut-Behrami, becoming the oldest woman to podium at the FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup.
Vonn, who has 28 Super G wins and five Super G titles to her name, said: "I finally put all the pieces together. This season there have been glimpses of good skiing, but I always made a mistake here or there. But today it was enough to get on the podium."
Things were to get even better, however, between the end of one season and the start of the next. At the 2025-26 season-opener in St Moritz, Vonn showed she still has everything necessary to compete at the top level, winning the Downhill race to claim the 83rd World Cup win of her career and her first since March 2018. The victory makes her the oldest skier to win a World Cup, beating the previous record set by Swiss legend Didier Cuche.
One day later, Lindsey was on the podium again after her historic World Cup downhill win. She finished second by a razor-thin margin of 0.24s.