Lindsey Vonn says surgery saved leg from amputation after Olympics crash
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American skier Lindsey Vonn, who crashed seconds into her downhill race at the 2026 Winter Olympics, said she is finally out of the hospital as she recovers.
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Lindsey Vonn
American alpine skier (born 1984)
Lindsey Caroline Vonn (née Kildow ; born October 18, 1984) is an American alpine ski racer. She won four World Cup overall championships with titles in 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2012. Vonn won the gold medal in downhill at the 2010 Winter Olympics, the first one for an American woman.
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U.S. Lindsey Vonn says surgery saved her leg from amputation after Olympics crash By Sarah Lynch Baldwin Sarah Lynch Baldwin Deputy Managing Editor Sarah Lynch Baldwin is a deputy managing editor of CBSNews.com. She helps lead national and breaking news coverage and shapes editorial workflows. Read Full Bio Sarah Lynch Baldwin Updated on: February 23, 2026 / 11:27 AM EST / CBS News Add CBS News on Google American skier Lindsey Vonn , who crashed seconds into her downhill race at the 2026 Winter Olympics , said on Monday that surgery saved her leg from amputation and that she is finally out of the hospital as she continues to recover. "I'm finally well enough to move to a hotel. It's not home yet, but it's a huge step!" she posted on Instagram . In a video message describing her injuries, Vonn credited her surgeon, Dr. Tom Hackett, for saving her leg from being amputated and said he performed a fasciectomy — a surgery that "filleted" her leg open. Vonn said she had a complex tibia fracture and other fractures, and that "everything was in pieces." She also had compartment syndrome, which the Cleveland Clinic describes as a painful buildup of pressure around muscles. She also said she broke her right ankle, had a blood transfusion and was in a wheelchair. "It has been quite the journey and by far the most extreme and painful and challenging injury I've ever faced in my entire life, times 100," she said. She said she has spent nearly two weeks lying in a hospital and was "almost completely immobile." "Now I will focus on rehab and progressing from a wheelchair to crutches in a few weeks," she wrote. "It will take around a year for all of the bones to heal and then I will decide if I want to take out all the metal or not, and then go back into surgery and finally fix my ACL." The 41-year-old American decided to compete in the Olympics despite rupturing her left ACL in a prior crash during a World Cup event in the Swiss Alps. She lost control in her Olympic race after app...
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