Lindsey Vonn skips World Cup season opener after injury layoff
American missed 10 weeks after fracturing ankle bone
Lindsey Vonn will skip Saturday's first race of the Alpine skiing season as she doesn't feel confident about the icy conditions on the race hill, 10 weeks after fracturing an ankle bone.
The four-time overall World Cup champion returned successfully to training on skis Thursday, but decided after another practice session Friday not to start in a giant slalom on the Rettenbach glacier on Saturday.
"In the few runs I've had since returning to snow I have felt strong, confident and been skiing without pain," she wrote on her Facebook page. "However, the icy conditions on the race hill coupled with the fact that it's only been 10 weeks since I fractured my ankle makes me slightly hesitant."
The American said she planned to return to the World Cup in Aspen for a giant slalom on Nov. 28 before travelling to Lake Louise for speed races the following week.
Vonn crashed during a training camp in New Zealand in August, suffering yet another setback after an impressive return from serious knee injuries last season. She broke the all-time record for most women's World Cup wins and grabbed her seventh downhill season title.
The American, who turned 31 Sunday, said her priority was to avoid any risks of hurting herself again.
"If the snow conditions were different my decision would have been different as well," she said. "But at this stage in my career I suppose it's better to err on the side of caution."
Vonn said Thursday she felt "awesome" after resuming ski training free of pain, and that her left ankle showed no reaction and held up "a lot better than I expected, honestly."
Vonn finished third in the overall standings last season and is the highest ranked skier to start in the new campaign as Austria's Anna Fenninger (injury) and Slovenia's Tina Maze (year off) won't compete.
Chasing her fifth big crystal globe, the American could become the oldest female skier to win the overall title. The record is held by Swiss great Veni Schneider, who was 30 when she last triumphed in 1995.