
 âI SAW IT COMING.â 
12 minutes before the start, Lindsey Vonnâs coach made a chilling observation about the course â flagging one exact section that felt âwrong.â
Seconds later, Vonn crashed at that very spot, breaking her leg and ending her Winter Olympic dream.
Whatâs haunting everyone now is how precise that warning was â down to the moment and the angleâŚÂ 
Revealed: Lindsey Vonnâs coachâs chilling pre-race observation that predicted specific details of her âcursedâ crash which broke her leg at Winter Olympics
Lindsey Vonnâs coach had reportedly said the 41-year-old had been overcompensating on her uninjured knee in the days leading up to the horrific crash that ended her Olympic career.
The 2010 Olympic downhill champion, who was already racing with ruptured ligaments in her left knee, was left screaming in pain after striking a gate just 13 seconds into Sundayâs run in Cortina. She suffered a âcomplexâ broken leg that will require multiple surgeries.
New details have since emerged regarding the cause of Vonnâs crash in the womenâs downhill, according to a report in Belgian newspaper Het Nieuwsblad.
The report stated that Norwegian ski legend and two-time Olympic gold medallist Aksel Lund Svindal, who had been Vonnâs coach since 2025, remarked after a training session last week that she was leaning more heavily on her right knee during landings in order to ease the strain on her injured left knee.
That appeared to be precisely what happened during her doomed turn. The veteran athlete sped over a hill before careering into one of the plastic markers lining the course and crashing to the ground during her Olympic final run.
Her right leg appeared to hit the ground first as a cloud of powder engulfed the American. Vonn then tumbled forwards again, slamming her shoulder into the snow, before coming to a halt on the slope.

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Vonnâs coach Aksel Lund Svindal (left) had reportedly observed that the 41-year-old had been overcompensating on her uninjured knee in the days leading up to her horrific crash on Sunday

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The 2010 Olympic downhill champion, who was already racing with ruptured ligaments in her left knee, was left screaming in pain after striking a gate just 13 seconds into Sundayâs run
Wouter Van den Broecke, medical supervisor for the International Ski Federation (FIS) at the Winter Games, wrote in Het Nieuwsblad: âI spoke with the Italian team doctor. The descent on Sunday was very challenging, he told me, bordering on too difficult, especially because the snow conditions werenât great.
âWe donât have any clarity about her exact injury (prior to the crash). But if it is indeed a âclassicâ complete cruciate ligament tear, she must have always had additional injuries: the sudden impact causes microfractures, often on the outside of the knee. This causes the bone marrow to swell, a condition called bone edema.
âYou canât numb that. She may be fit and strong, and strapped in a brace, but you canât stop the shock. You could clearly see that Vonn couldnât handle the pressure and âflew awayâ as a result.â
Van den Broecke, who firmly believes the decision to green-light her race went against medical professionalism, added: âThis crash was an accident waiting to happen. On the one hand, thereâs the world star, a fantastic woman who, at 41, is trying to return to the Olympics after countless sacrifices. On the other hand, this is a particularly bad example for young people when it comes to health and safety.â
Vonn spoke publicly for the first time since her crash on Monday, insisting the accident was not caused by the ruptured knee ligaments she suffered in the same left leg nine days earlier.
Posting on Instagram, the American star said: âYesterday my Olympic dream did not finish the way I dreamt it would. It wasnât a story book ending or a fairytale, it was just life. I dared to dream and had worked so hard to achieve it.
âBecause in downhill ski racing the difference between a strategic line and a catastrophic injury can be as small as five inches.
âI was simply five inches too ŃΚÔĐ˝Ń on my line when my right arm hooked inside of the gate, twisting me and resulted in my crash. My ACL and past injuries had nothing to do with my crash whatsoever.

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Vonn spoke publicly for the first time since her crash on Monday, insisting the accident was not caused by the ruptured knee ligaments she suffered in the same left leg nine days earlier

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Vonn was airlifted off the mountain after the horrific crash which caused her to suffer a âcomplexâ broken leg which will require multiple surgeries

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The Cortina crowd had been stunned into silence and the downhill event was temporarily suspended, with other compeŃΚŃors removing their skis at the top of the slope
âUnfortunately, I sustained a complex tibia fracture that is currently stable but will require multiple surgeries to fix properly.â
Following her crash, organisers began playing background music to drown out her cries as she was lifted on to a stretcher and off the mountain.
The Cortina crowd had been stunned into silence and the downhill event was subsequently suspended, with other compeŃΚŃors removing their skis at the top of the slope as they waited for Vonn to be evacuated.
Vonnâs team-mate Breezy Johnson, 30, ultimately won the downhill race, securing gold for the USA ahead of Germanyâs Emma Aicher, 22.
On Monday afternoon, Svindal posted on social media: âLindsey. You are incredibly brave. You inspire the people who follow your journey and us who work closely with you every day. Yesterday was a tough day on the mountain. For everyone, but especially for you.
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 Lindsey Vonn breaks silence on horror crash that ended Winter Olympic dreams

âNevertheless, something happened that I think says it all. âCongratulate Breezy and tell her she did a great job.â Your teammate was in the lead, and that was the message you wanted to convey to the US ski team coaches before being flown to the hospital. True character is revealed in difficult moments.â
Vonnâs American team-mate Keely Cashman said people who had criticised her for competing âdo not know whatâs going onâ.
âPeople that donât know ski racing donât really understand what happened yesterday,â downhill skier Cashman said on Monday.
âShe hooked her arm on the gate, which twisted her around. She was going probably 70mph, and so that twists your body around.â
Italyâs two-time world champion Federica Brignone also defended Vonn, saying: âItâs your body, then you decide what to do, whether to race or not. Itâs not up to others. Only you.â