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Lindsey Vonn Responds to Retirement Rumors After Multiple Surgeries

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Lindsey Vonn is not done yet, and she is making that loud and clear. Ever since she crashed during the women’s downhill race at the 2026 Winter Olympics and underwent five surgeries, rumors about her retirement started making the rounds. Once it got out of hand, Vonn had to step in herself to make her stance clear.

On March 15, an X account named Quiveut posted a tweet listing the names of several alpine skiing stars they believed would be stepping away from the sport. The post (Trans. from French) said, “This winter, several big names in alpine skiing are retiring: Lindsey Vonn, Joana Hälen, Niels Hintermann, Dave Ryding, Alexis Pinturault, Romed Baumann, Adrien Théaux, plus Lara Gut, who announced her retirement before the season but was injured all winter. Maybe she’ll come back…? 🤞🏼”

This made Vonn break her silence as she promptly asked, “Who said I was retiring?”

Clearly, Lindsey Vonn did not want the speculation to grow. And with just a few words, she shut down the rumors. Soon, the account holder was forced to explain themselves.

The X account user clarified by saying, “No one said it, and I hope u’ll turn back….But I heard u almost had to b amputated, and I thought this would b a too serious injury for another come back. I wanted to write ur retirement was just a supposition, but not enough letters in a single tweet for this…”

But Vonn wasn’t done responding. She then replied to another user in the same thread.

Under the same retirement rumor post, another X user posted a suggestion for Lindsey Vonn, “The ego is so strong in this one. Take your medicine Lindsey. You nearly lost your leg. Put your feet up and be done.”

But Vonn wasn’t going to stay silent. She responded, “Think you’re mistaking ego for joy. I’ve said it my whole life; I love skiing. I’ll put my feet up when I’m good and ready thank you 😊”

Later, she gave a more detailed statement about her future: “No, I’m not ready to discuss my future in skiing. My 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.”

She further added, “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, I’m the only one that will decide my future. I don’t need anyone’s permission to do what makes me happy. Maybe that means racing again, maybe that doesn’t. Only time will tell. Please stop telling me what I should or should not do. I’ll let you know when I decide.”

Lindsey Vonn’s official words on how she imagined the final chapter of her career had come in 2025. “If I can make it, it would be a thrilling and a great way to kind of close the loop on my career,” Vonn said signaling that the Milan Olympics would be her last dance.

But now, the crash has changed the situation and brought fresh questions about what comes next. Especially since Vonn’s father had openly said he wants her to step away from the sport after the crash.

Vonn’s father, Alan Kildow, in a telephone interview with the Associated Press, he said: “She’s 41 years old and this is the end of her career. There will be no more ski races for Lindsey Vonn, as long as I have anything to say about it.”

Even so, this is not the first time Lindsey Vonn has had to slam speculation about her future.

Lindsey Vonn fired back at a critic questioning her Olympic call
On January 30, 2026, before the Olympics, Lindsey Vonn crashed during a World Cup race in Crans-Montana, resulting in an ACL injury to her knee just days before the Games. The injury immediately raised questions about whether the 41-year-old should still compete.

Meanwhile, a columnist suggested that Vonn might be taking a risk with “long-term physical repercussions” to compete “way past” her athletic prime at the age of 41. The comment did not sit well with the American skier, who responded directly on social media.

“I’m sorry Greg but this is a very odd opinion piece. The pain and suffering is the point? I’m searching for meaning? Why am I taking risk ‘at my age?’ This ageism stuff is getting really old.”

She further added, “My life does not revolve around ski racing. I am a woman that loves to ski. I don’t have an identity issue, I know exactly who I am…I came all this way for one final Olympics and I’m going to go and do my best, ACL or no. It’s as simple as that.”

But that was not the only time she had to respond to outside opinions. After the injury, a prediction marketplace also weighed in on the situation, posting, “Lindsey Vonn being airlifted days before the Winter Games is a brutal market correction. The public bet on the narrative, but physics had the final say.”

Vonn did not let that statement stand either. She fired back, “Physics had the final say? No, I have the final say.”

And she backed it up by continuing her Olympic push. But fate had other plans waiting for her on the slopes. On February 8, 2026, Vonn ran during the women’s downhill skiing race and hit a gate approximately 13 seconds into her run and collapsed on the skiing course.

Weeks later, Vonn has now begun the early stages of rehabilitation. She even shared updates showing short sessions on a stationary bike. While the recovery process will take time, Vonn has clarified that she isn’t retiring for now.

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Lindsey vonn

The night shimmered in quiet elegance as Lindsey Vonn stepped onto the Met Gala carpet, her presence carrying more than glamour. Just months ago, the world feared she might never walk the same again. Now, every step she took felt like a victory whispered through pain, resilience, and an unbreakable will.

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The night shimmered in quiet elegance as Lindsey Vonn stepped onto the Met Gala carpet, her presence carrying more than glamour. Just months ago, the world feared she might never walk the same again. Now, every step she took felt like a victory whispered through pain, resilience, and an unbreakable will.

Back in February, the mountains nearly claimed more than a race—they almost took her leg. The crash was brutal, the recovery uncertain, and the silence afterward heavy. Surgeons worked against time, while she fought battles unseen, where strength meant simply holding on when everything else seemed to slip away.

On this night, she wore more than a gown. The Thom Browne masterpiece, shimmering with thousands of beads, clung to her like a second skin—half woman, half sculpture. It told a story without words: of fragility shaped into strength, of scars turned into art, of a body that refused to surrender.

As cameras flashed, the future lingered in quiet mystery. Would she return to the slopes, or had life written a new chapter for her? She didn’t rush the answer. Instead, she stood tall in the moment—alive, evolving, and reminding the world that sometimes, survival itself is the greatest comeback.

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Olympics

The tale of Lindsey Vonn was told like a legend. She had flown down icy slopes like the wind, but one harsh fall before the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics left her body broken and her spirit searching for calm.

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The tale of Lindsey Vonn was told like a legend. She had flown down icy slopes like the wind, but one harsh fall before the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics left her body broken and her spirit searching for calm.

The elders said even the strongest trees bend after a storm. With eight scars already and another healing yet to come, Lindsey sat between courage and uncertainty. Her bones would mend in time, but her heart needed longer—far from the noise of racing crowds and roaring mountains.

“I will not rush the river,” she seemed to whisper to the wind. The path ahead was hidden in mist. Perhaps she would race again when the snows of 2027 returned, or perhaps she would choose a quieter road, where peace mattered more than victory.

So the village waited, not for her return to glory, but for her return to herself. For sometimes, the bravest journey is not down a mountain—but within, where no medals are won, yet everything is found.

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Olympics

The mountain roared that morning, cold and unforgiving, as Lindsey pushed off with fire in her chest. She had come back for one last dance, chasing the wind she once ruled. But just seconds in, fate struck hard. The snow betrayed her, and in a blink, strength turned into silence.

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The mountain roared that morning, cold and unforgiving, as Lindsey pushed off with fire in her chest. She had come back for one last dance, chasing the wind she once ruled. But just seconds in, fate struck hard. The snow betrayed her, and in a blink, strength turned into silence.

In the hospital, under dim lights and heavy breaths, she faced a truth colder than ice. Her leg, once her greatest weapon, nearly slipped away forever. Pain wasn’t new to her—but this pain spoke differently, deeper, like a storm that refused to pass.

Days turned into slow steps. From a wheelchair to crutches, every inch forward felt like climbing a mountain without skis. The world asked questions about her future, but she had none to give. Right now, survival was enough. Healing became her only race.

Yet inside her, the same fire whispered. Tell her she can’t, and she listens—but only to rise stronger. Whether she returns or not, the story isn’t finished. Some battles aren’t about winning medals, but about standing again when life tries to break you

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