Lindsey Vonn Insists 2026 Olympics Was ‘Not a Factor’ in Skiing Return: ‘I Don’t Want to Put Any Expectations on It'

Mar. 15, 2025

Lindsey Vonn.Photo:JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP via Getty

Lindsey Vonn arrives ahead of the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games in Paris on July 26, 2024

JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP via Getty

During an interview onTodayon Tuesday, Dec. 10, the skiing champion, 40, said the upcoming 2026 Olympics was “not a factor” in her decision toreturn to the sportas she reflected on getting back on the slopes over the weekend in the FIS Fall Festival competition in Colorado.

“It’s definitely not a factor in what I’m doing now,” Vonn said of the Olympics, which will take place in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy.

“I think everyone knows how much I love Cortina,” she continued, mentioning her recording-breaking World Cup wins there. “Let’s see what happens but I don’t want to put any expectations on it.”

“No one’s done this before with a knee replacement [and] I am slightly older than I was before," the professional alpine skier said on the show. “So I don’t know… but if I could, that would be amazing.”

In 2018, Vonnannounced her retirementfrom skiing, writing on Instagram that she had “accepted” thatshe could no longer participate in the sportdue to a torn lateral collateral ligament (LCL). She wrote about the decision in a memoir titledRise: My Story, released in 2022.

She’d undergomultiple knee surgeriesincluding a full replacement in April. The athlete documented her journey back to strength in a series of posts on her Instagram.

To stay active, Vonn took on new sports, including wake surfing. But in November, Vonn shocked the sports world in an interview withThe New York Timeswhen she announced she was coming back to skiing.

Turns out, Vonn shocked herself too, tellingTodaythat she “never thought it was going to happen" and that she’s “just as surprised as anybody else.”

“I always thought [my skiing career] was over,” Vonn said. “I mean, of course, if I had the opportunity to keep skiing I would have, but my injuries always held me back.”

Her return so far “has been incredible," including that middle-of-the-pack placement over the weekend. “I’m really enjoying this journey,” Vonn said. “I honestly don’t know how far I can take it,”

South Korea, Pyeongchang, Olympics, Alpine Skiing, combination, women’s downhill, Jeongseon Alpine Centre: Lindsey Vonn from the USA in action

Tobias Hase/picture alliance via Getty

As for why she actually decided to ski again, the skier told Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb and Craig Melvin that her attitude toward the sport changed after she “felt so good” coming out of surgery.

“I had no more pain and all the things that had been bothering me for so many years were suddenly gone and I thought, ‘If I feel this good playing tennis and all these other things, what about skiing?’ ” Vonn explained.

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The gold medalist is now calling her next new chapter in skiing “an adventure.”

“I don’t know where this is going to lead, but I am so happy to not be in a pain anymore and do to the thing I love most, which is skiing,” she shared.

Vonn’s first major tournament since returning will be at the World Cup circuit this winter season.

Todayairs weekdays (beginning at 7 a.m. ET) on NBC.

source: people.com