Will Lindsey Vonn’s Comeback Have a Storybook Ending? from Outside magazine Fred Dreier

Will Lindsey Vonn’s Comeback Have a Storybook Ending?

Oh to be a Hollywood producer, and to read and reject movie scripts all day long.

Too cliche! Too fake! 

If I did the job, I would probably shoot down a movie proposal about a 41-year-old downhill ski racer who overcomes a debilitating injury, returns to the sport after a half-decade in retirement, and then wins Olympic gold.

Nobody will believe this! 

Yeah, I’d be the producer dumb enough to reject the Lindsey Vonn story.

But hey, sometimes truth is stranger than fiction. And at the moment, Vonn’s comeback to ski racing is on the trajectory toward a storybook ending that even Hollywood would deem too farfetched to believe.

In case you missed it, Vonn recently added a few more eye-popping results to her already stuffed case of World Cup medals and trophies. From December 20 to 21, the world’s best Alpine skiers competed in World Cup races in Val-d ‘Isere, France, an important tune-up event ahead of the 2026 Winter Olympics that are just seven weeks away.

Vonn rocketed to a bronze medal in the Downhill race on Saturday, December 20, and won another bronze in the Super-G the following day. On Sunday, she was just 0.36 of a second behind the winner, Sofia Goggia of Italy.

Bronze isn’t gold, of course, but the podium finishes are more evidence that Vonn is ready to challenge for the Olympic title in Cortina this coming February. After five World Cup races in 2026, Vonn has one gold, one silver, two bronze, and one chocolate (what I call a fourth-place finish).

She’s been the most consistent woman in Alpine skiing’s speed events (Downhill and Super-G), and currently leads the World Cup standings in the Downhill. On Tuesday, the U.S. Ski and Snowboard team told The New York Times that Vonn’s results had qualified her for the 2026 Olympic team.

Besides the results, there are other positive signs that Vonn is rounding into form. She’s taking aggressive lines on the World Cup routes, skying off of jumps, and cutting it close on gates. On December 21, she hit a high speed of 71 miles per hour on the Val d’Isere course—one of the fastest top speeds of the day. Vonn’s battered knees and muscles, which were held together by surgeries and physical therapy during the final few years of her storied career, appear to on top form.

And Vonn no longer seems to be simply content with just being there. A year ago, when Vonn announced her comeback, her public comments were all positive, a steady stream of immaculate vibes about the joy she felt in returning to competition, and how happy she was to be skiing pain-free on her infamously hobbled right knee. I don’t blame her. She had her damaged joint fixed by cutting-edge science—Vonn deserved to revel in the thrill of the return.

Over the summer, when we spoke to her for an Outside Magazine cover story, Vonn’s tone was shifting. She told us she had nothing to prove in ski racing. But she added an important caveat.

“I wouldn’t be doing this if I didn’t think I could be competitive,” she said.

To read Vonn’s post-race quotes throughout the 2025 World Cup season is to absorb the perspective of someone who is laser-focused on performance, improvement, and victory. She knows when she screws up, she hones in on where she can improve. The champion’s mindset—persnickety, hyper-critical, focused—is back.

“I wish I could have been a little bit better today,” Vonn told reporters after Sunday’s Super-G in France. “I thought I executed the middle section, where I didn’t ski well in training, but on the bottom, I made a big mistake, and I lost a lot of time, so I was mad at myself for that.”

Another sign that Vonn is nearing her best—she can artfully express herself in German, the unofficial language of ski racing.

So, what does all of this mean in the grander scheme of Vonn’s comeback? There are two World Cup rounds remaining before the Olympics, and Vonn will take several weeks off to rest before returning to competition on January 10 in Zauchensee, Switzerland. She’s already done enough to make Team USA for the Winter Games, so she can focus her mind and body on the Cortina races, instead of worrying about chasing qualification points.

An Olympic medal in Italy would place Vonn’s comeback up there with the best—think NHL star Mario Lemieux, quarterback Peyton Manning, Formula 1 driver Niki Lauda, or yeah, Tiger Woods.

I feel guilty writing about the potential of a storybook ending for Vonn—don’t jinx it! Thus, I’ll include the requisite reminder that nothing is guaranteed in elite competition, and that downhill skiing can be a cruel sport of high-speed crashes, and heartache and happiness separated by hundredths of a second.

But for all those American fans who plan to watch the Cortina Olympics, be forewarned: Hollywood’s best scriptwriters are sitting at their typewriters, pounding out the bones of a sports movie about Lindsey Vonn. And we just may be lucky enough to watch it unfold.

The post Will Lindsey Vonn’s Comeback Have a Storybook Ending? appeared first on Outside Online.

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