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    Lindsey Vonn undergoes second operation after horrific Winter Olympics leg break

    Join the Miguel Delaney: Inside Football newsletter and get behind-the-scenes access and unrivalled insightJoin the Miguel Delaney: Inside Football newsletterJoin the Miguel Delaney: Inside Football newsletterU.S. skiing great Lindsey Vonn has undergone two operations in Italy following a severe leg fracture sustained during a highly anticipated Winter Olympics race. The 41-year-old, who was competing with a torn ACL, suffered the horrific injury just 13 seconds into her audacious bid for downhill gold, which ended in agony on Sunday.Vonn was airlifted by helicopter from Cortina d’Ampezzo to the Ca’ Foncello Hospital in Treviso. A source close to the matter confirmed on Monday that a joint team of local orthopaedic and plastic surgeons performed the procedures. These operations were crucial for stabilising her and preventing complications related to swelling and blood flow.While Vonn’s personal doctor was present and assisted, Italian surgeons led the medical interventions.U.S. delegation may give updateThe United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee did not respond to a request for comment about the treatment for Vonn, one of the most decorated ski racers in history.The hospital had said on Sunday that she underwent an operation to stabilise her left leg but did not mention a second procedure. She suffered the ACL injury to her left knee in late January.The hospital had initially said it would provide a further update on her condition at 1100 GMT on Monday but this plan was scrapped and further information was expected to come from the U.S. delegation.A small group of reporters waited outside the hospital in Treviso, which is a short drive from Venice, but it was otherwise a regular day there with no well-wishers turning up.Lindsey Vonn was transported to hopsital by helicopter after crashing in the women’s downhill event on Sunday (Francois-Xavier MARIT / AFP via Getty Images)‘One in a thousand’ accidentThe case has highlighted a debate in elite sport over who decides when an injured athlete is fit to compete and what message those decisions send.International Ski Federation President Johan Eliasch said the competitor had to make up their own mind.”I firmly believe that this has to be decided by the individual … And in her case, she certainly knows her injuries a lot better than anybody else,” he told reporters on Monday.”And what is also important for people to understand that the accident that she had yesterday, she was incredibly unlucky….

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    2026-02-09 23:44:57

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