Vonn’s ailing knee has her on sidelines


Staff report

BEAVER CREEK, Colo.

The new Beaver Creek downhill course features a gliding section near the start for a skier to drop into a tuck and build speed.

There are technical turns in the middle, followed by a steep part — maybe the steepest on the World Cup circuit — and then a giant jump at the finish.

An ideal track for Lindsey Vonn — if she were here, of course.

The reigning Olympic downhill champion was supposed to make her return this week from a serious right knee injury she suffered in a crash last February.

But after hurting her knee again in a training mishap last week, Vonn will sit out to rest and rehab because everything she does is with an eye toward the Sochi Games, which are less than three months away.

Her fellow competitors spent the morning learning the nuances of a challenging course called “Raptor” in downhill training on Tuesday, with Lara Gut of Switzerland posting the fastest time of 1 minute, 43.42 seconds.

No Vonn now, but there is a chance she could be in the starting gate on Dec. 6 in Lake Louise, Alberta, a venue that’s treated her so well that it’s playfully dubbed “Lake Lindsey.”

At least, U.S. women’s head coach Alex Hoedlmoser remains hopeful that Vonn’s ailing right knee will be ready for a return to racing in time for Lake Louise.

“It’s all going to be determined on how her knee feels,” Hoedlmoser said. “It’s up to her. She’s the only one who knows how her knee feels.”

Hoedlmoser was there the day of Vonn’s crash at the speed center in Copper Mountain on Nov. 19, when she tumbled going from sunshine into the shade on a tricky part of the hill.

Vonn partially tore one of the reconstructed ligaments in her surgically repaired knee. She will continue to go through therapy on her knee and hasn’t ruled out Lake Louise.

Her good friend and rival, Maria Hoefl-Riesch of Germany, visited with Vonn the other day just to lift her spirits. She fully expects to see Vonn back sooner rather than later.

“She’s of course sad she can’t be here,” said Hoefl-Riesch, who turned in the eighth-fastest training time on Tuesday, 1.01 seconds behind Gut. “But she was positive because she’s not out for the season and that she maybe can come back next week already. If anybody is strong enough in the head, it’s her.”

This new course — the site of the 2015 world championships — appears well suited for Vonn given all the terrain changes.