Lindsey Vonn’s extraordinary comeback after nearly six years away from ski racing will not be derailed by a fall sustaned last week in Switzerland.

The 41-year-old American announced Tuesday she will compete in Winter Olympics despite a left knee injury sustained in an ill-timed crash exactly one week before the Milan Cortina Opening Ceremony.

Vonn got off-balance coming out of a jump in the upper section of Friday’s World Cup downhill race in Crans-Montana, Switzerland. She was unable to recover and fell at high speed, skidding across the snow before careening into the orange safety netting on the side of the course.

While Vonn was able to get to her feet and slowly and gingerly make her down the rest of the course, she stopped several times to grasp at her left knee and appeared to avoid putting any weight on it. Vonn was airlifted from the race area as a precaution and, according to a statement from USA Skiing and Snowboarding on Friday morning, was “being evaluated.”

Later on Friday, Vonn expressed optimism via Instagram that her “Olympic dream is not over.” She wrote that she was “discussing the situation” with doctors and “will continue to undergo further exams.”

“This is a very difficult outcome one week before the Olympics … but if there’s one thing I know how to do, it’s a comeback,” Vonn added.

Now, she’ll attempt to come back from yet another injury, this time just days before the Olympics are set to begin.

Vonn wasn’t the only skier to crash amid adverse conditions and poor visibility in Crans-Montana. Austria’s Nina Ortlieb and Norway’s Marte Monsen, two of the five skiers who started before Vonn, also failed to complete their runs, prompting organizers to cancel the rest of the competition.

“The main reason is the safety of the athletes,” Women’s World Cup Race Director Peter Gerdol explained. “The visibility was getting worse and worse, they couldn’t see the race line properly and it caused mistakes. We saw six athletes starting and all six had some mistakes. This was a sign that it was a high-risk situation.”

Vonn is poised to be one of the faces of the Milan Cortina Games thanks to a comeback story that defied all reasonable expectations.

The four-time overall World Cup champion and 2010 Olympic downhill gold medalist retired in 2019 because the physical toll of her many injuries had become too much to bear. When she underwent right knee surgery in April 2024, her goal was nothing more than to be able to live a normal, pain-free life.

Vonn felt so much better after her partial knee replacement surgery that she made a stunning announcement in November 2024 that she was un-retiring. She has been dominant in downhill races this World Cup season and finished on the podium in two of her first three super-G races, raising hopes that she can contend for medals in both disciplines in Cortina.

The women’s downhill competition is scheduled for February 8 and the women’s super-G will take place four days later.

Vonn could have skipped the notoriously treacherous Crans-Montana downhill, but she chose to race in hopes of accumulating more World Cup points. She entered the race leading the downhill standings and sixth in the overall competition.

Rather than playing it safe in poor conditions with the Olympics just days away, Vonn went all-out. She roared out of the start house and registered the fastest time through the first checkpoint.

For better or worse, Vonn was always going to go for it.

That’s how her remarkable comeback made it this far. The question now is, will the injured left allow her to compete at her best.