Speed
queen Vonn to retire at end of season
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[October 12, 2018]
(Reuters) - Lindsey Vonn, widely
regarded as the greatest female ski racer of all-time, will retire
from competition following the 2018-19 season even if she fails to
break the record for World Cup wins, the American said on Thursday.
The 33-year-old holds the women's record of 82 World Cup wins and
trails only Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark's long-standing mark of
86.
"This is going to be my last season. Definitely retiring after this
year," Vonn said in New York while moderating a panel on small
businesses.
"If I could break the record that would be amazing, if I can't it
has been a great ride and I am still the most successful female and
I still think that's something to be really proud of.
"So we'll just see what happens this year."
Vonn, who in 2015 founded the education-focused Lindsey Vonn
Foundation, said she would turn her attention to launching her own
business when she hangs up her skis.
"My experiences on the slopes have helped shape me into who I am
today," she said on Twitter.
"I'm confident those same lessons will pay off as I begin to explore
what's next for my career."
Since first tearing her ACL in 2007, Vonn has suffered frequent knee
ligament injuries as well as broken bones. She missed the 2014 Sochi
Games due to a serious knee injury which she has been managing ever
since.
The Minnesota-born skier had said at the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics
that she would not quit until beating Stenmark's record.
"I am hoping that is just one season. I am not going to quit until I
get that record, that is for sure, no matter how much pain I am in,"
Vonn said in February.
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Bronze medallist Lindsey Vonn of the U.S. celebrates with the
Italian flag during the flower ceremony. REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger
"But I really hope it only takes one more season because it would be
difficult for me to continue on after that."
U.S. Ski & Snowboard President and CEO Tiger Shaw hailed Vonn as an
icon of world sport.
"The news today that the forthcoming season will be Lindsey's last
is to be celebrated," Shaw said.
"We all have a chance to watch an incredible athlete end her
glittering competitive ski racing career by writing a record
breaking new chapter. That is an appropriate way to pay homage to
this chapter of Lindsey's life."
Vonn, who became the oldest women's alpine skier to win an Olympic
medal when she picked up a downhill bronze in South Korea earlier
this year, has also stated her desire to test herself against her
male counterparts.
Vonn, who began skiing at the age of three and started racing at
seven, picked up her first Olympic medal when she won gold at the
2010 Vancouver Games.
Vonn's final season will kick off in Lake Louise in late November.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Additional reporting by Rory
Carroll; Editing by Ian Ransom)
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