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Vonn Ready for Olympic Downhill
WHISTLER CREEKSIDE, BC (Feb. 16) – When American Lindsey Vonn (Vail, CO) breaks the starting wand Wednesday in the Olympic downhill, it will be her first race since clinching the World Cup super G title with a win on Jan. 31. Joining her in the start are teammates Julia Mancuso (Olympic Valley, CA), Stacey Cook (Mammoth Mountain, CA) and Alice McKennis (Glenwood Springs, CO).

"Lindsey is a tough competitor and there isn't going to be anything holding her back for sure," said women's Head Coach Jim Tracy. "We had a great video session last night and there will be places that she needs to improve on for sure. It's going to be tough tomorrow. There's going to be four or five girls that can get it there. Tomorrow it's going to take high focus and great execution."

Vonn, who said Monday's downhill training further aggravated her shin injury, received another cushion from the weather when Tuesday's training was canceled due to heavy snow. However, she had already planned to opt out of the session in favor of another day's rest and therapy.

"I was really actually happy that we got another day off today," said Vonn, the reigning World Champion in downhill and a two-time World Cup downhill title holder. "Yesterday in the first downhill training run, my shin was definitely hurting quite a bit, so I'm really happy that I got a chance to rest it. At the same time, yesterday was definitely really positive. I was able to ski the way I wanted to – it was really painful - but I made it down and that was a really positive step.

"I'm really excited about the race tomorrow, it's been a lot of hurry up and wait with all these cancelations," said Vonn, who spent Tuesday doing therapy and hanging out with family. "But I'm definitely antsy to get racing. I'm a fighter and I just want to get out there and start competing."

Also looking forward to getting back in the gate is Cook, who was airlifted to the Whistler Polyclinic after a crash in the opening women's training run on Feb. 11. Following successful therapy and a completed training run Monday, she's ready to take revenge on Franz's Olympic downhill.

"She took a couple of days off, she was pretty sore, but now she's feeling a lot better," said Tracy of Cook. "She had an OK training run yesterday and is a bit nervous for sure, but once she got that one (the training run) under her belt, she felt pretty confident that she can have a good race on Wednesday."

"It's definitely has not been your standard Olympics," said Cook. "I went down before Opening Ceremonies even started and then being in rehab all day everyday is tough. The important thing is that my body is fine and that I did get out skiing again today and I'm feeling a lot better on my skis today that I did yesterday. I'll be ready to race and ready to give it my all and that's what I came here for."
Mancuso, the reigning Olympic gold medalist in giant slalom, had secured a downhill start through her World Cup results and rolls into the medal race with steam from finishing second in Monday's shortened downhill training run. For 20-year-old McKennis, who made the Olympic Team in only her first year on the World Cup tour, tomorrow's start, is worth all the hard work.

"I trained really hard in the prep period and it was really great to train with all of the World Cup Team of Lindsey, Stacey and Julia," said McKennis, on Alice McKennis Day in Aspen. "It was really great to have that pace. Those girls pushed me a lot to try and step up my skiing. Coming into the World Cup season I was just hoping to score World Cup points and to do as well as I've been doing is pretty surprising, but really exciting at the same time."

The women's race starts at 11 a.m. PT and will be carried in NBC's primetime show Wednesday evening.

"I think we all feel pretty good about the chances, but this is going to show who has weathered the nerves, the delays and the mental aspect of our sport. It's been tough and everyone is going to have to have their A-game tomorrow," said Tracy.
Pain-Filled Vonn Leads Training
WHISTLER CREEKSIDE (Feb. 15) – The U.S. Olympic Alpine Ski Team bore its teeth in a speedy return to action today, with Lindsey Vonn (Vail, CO) and Julia Mancuso (Olympic Valley, CA) going 1-2 in the first session of downhill training and four Americans landing among the top 20 in the afternoon session Monday.

Vonn, considered the favorite Wednesday's downhill, continued to test her bruised shin after reporting progress in training Sunday.

"It's tough," she said. "I honestly was expecting it to be a little bit better than it was. Yesterday I trained slalom and it felt OK. But the course here is pretty bumpy – I was pretty shocked. It was like jarring – it was a fight to make it down."

"I was just barely in my tuck any part of the course. I think this is the worst course for my shin. I just have to fight through it, do some therapy now, and hopefully Mother Nature will give me another day off tomorrow. I just have to be able to grit my teeth and fight through it on Wednesday and hopefully still come out on top."

The skiers finished just above the Hot Air finish jump in the morning session and skied the bottom section from the combined slalom start in the afternoon, when Vonn was 20th in the second leg.

Vonn may refrain from training Tuesday, weather or not. She said she was taken aback that her first run time was so fast.

"I was honestly surprised," Vonn said. "I almost went out of the course a couple times. It wasn't bad skiing, it was just fighting to make it down skiing. It's not a feel-good course, it's not a fun course, it's a stick-your-nose-in-it-and-make-it-down course. If you're skiing aggressive and not sliding, you'll be fast."

Mancuso added a tie for fifth in the second session as the 2006 giant slalom gold medalist put the speed field on notice.

Also starting in the downhill will be Alice McKennis (Glenwood Springs, CO), who took ninth in her final World Cup downhill in St. Mortiz, Switzerland on Jan. 30 and Stacey Cook (Mammoth Mountain, CA), who was 13th and 14th in Monday's training sessions after a hard crash last week.

Thursday's super combined follows Wednesday's downhill for the women.

Vonn, U.S. Women Back to Work
WHISTLER CREEKSIDE, BC (Feb. 14) – With four consecutive days of downhill training scrapped due to weather, the U.S. Olympic Alpine Ski Team, including World Champion Lindsey Vonn (Vail, CO) and 2006 gold medalist Julia Mancuso (Olympic Valley, CA) are ready to get back to official training Monday. If all goes well, and Mother Nature cooperates, the start of medal competition will follow with downhill on Wednesday.

Organizers are calling for a split training session around the men's downhill medal event. The first half kicks off at 10 a.m. with athletes skiing full steam from the top of the course to just above the Hot Air finish jump. At approximately 1 p.m., and following the men's flower ceremonies, the women will return to Franz's run and ski the bottom section, starting from the combined slalom start in order to get enough speed for a realistic flight off Hot Air into the finish.

If completed as planned, it will serve as an official training run and allow medal competition to begin Wednesday with downhill.
"Our girls are doing great. We've been training slalom and some super G, powder skiing, sharing our meals together - it's just an awesome atmosphere to be around," said women's Head Coach Jim Tracy. "They're all in a good mindset and looking forward to racing."
Among those training Sunday was Vonn, who put her bruised right shin to the test for the first time since Feb. 2.
"It didn't feel perfect," said Vonn, a three-time Olympian. "I'm still in quite a bit of pain while skiing, but the time off snow has been incredibly beneficial for me. I needed time to heal and Mother Nature helped me out with that. But now that I've gone out and taken a few runs, I know I can do it. I'm ready to get Olympic competition started and I know my teammates are ready to go too."
In addition to Vonn and Mancuso, who took full advantage of the snow day with some powder skiing, Stacey Cook (Mammoth Mountain, CA) returns to action following a crash Thursday before the session was canceled due to poor visibility. Cook was airlifted from the hill to the Whistler Polyclinic, yet escaped with only bruising.
Following her crash last Thursday, Cook said, ""It's not the ideal way to start the Olympics, but I've just got to keep fighting. I hear I'm lucky, so I've just got to keep that luck going. I'm going to be ready. I'll be back out there." And she will, along with Alice McKennis (Glenwood Springs, CO), Leanne Smith (Conway, NH), Chelsea Marshall (Pittsfield, VT) and Kaylin Richardson (Edina, MN).
Following the training run, coaches will decide who will join Vonn and Mancuso on the start list for the downhill medal event.
But without the incredible effort of legions of volunteers, Tracy says, training would not be possible.
"We had at least 20 centimeters of snow on the top last night and they had winch cats working the top down to Ladner's Roll," said Tracy. "Below that, the volunteers are slipped everything wall to wall smoothing everything out. It's supposed to get down to the mid 20's tonight and if that happens everything should freeze up nicely. They are doing the best possible job with the cards they've been dealt and my hat goes off to them."
Weather Calls Women’s Downhill Training
WHISTLER CREEKSIDE (Feb. 14) - Officials made an early call Sunday to cancel another women's downhill training session as a mix of rain and snow continued to fall overnight on Franz's Olympic run. No immediate word is available on a possible reschedule. Women must complete one full training run in order to hold a race. The first women's race is set for Wednesday, Feb. 17 with downhill featuring Lindsey Vonn (Vail, CO), the reigning downhill World Champion.

Men have completed a full training run and are rescheduled to open Olympic alpine competition Monday with the downhill at 10:30 a.m. PT. Bode Miller (Franconia, NH), Andrew Weibrecht (Lake Placid, NY), Marco Sullivan (Squaw Valley, CA) and Steven Nyman (Sundance, UT) will start for the Americans.



Combined Rescheduling Good for Vonn
WHISTLER CREEKSIDE (Feb. 12) – Lindsey Vonn (Vail, CO) caught another break for her bruised shin on Friday when organizers decided to cancel Saturday's third downhill training run for super combined. The cancelation forces the postponement of the medal event originally slated to open women's alpine competition Sunday. Times have not yet been set for the training run or the medal event.

"I think I'm lucking out pretty heavily because of all the cancellations," said the two-time World Cup overall champion. "Normally I would be disappointed, but for my shin I think this is the best possible scenario. This gives me quite a bit more time to rest up and heal. Obviously, I'm looking forward to running the course, but at this point, as much rest as I can get on my leg will be great."

In order to focus all efforts on preparing the men's downhill track for the opening alpine medal event Saturday at 11:45, officials decided to cancel the  women's training run  that morning  The women have yet to be able to train on the course, with another run now scheduled Sunday.

As a result of that rescheduling, Sunday's super combined medal event will also be shuffled to a later date, which won't be decided until an official training run is completed on Franz's Olympic downhill course.

"I inspected the course today and course workers are doing the best they can to get it up to shape, but it's been rainy and it rained all day yesterday, and it's definitely not in raceable condition," Vonn said. "I think that cancelling the training run already tomorrow is a good move."

Vonn said she tested her leg Thursday and was satisfied that she could have competed.

"I wanted to make sure that I could be able to ski safely down," Vonn said. "If you're skiing defensively, it's always dangerous. I pushed myself hard yesterday, and I felt like I could've done the training run. Obviously with a lot of pain, but I could have done it."

The break also means more rest for Stacey Cook (Mammoth Mountain, CA), who crashed hard in Thursday's shortened session.

Olympic gold medalist Julia Mancuso (Olympic Valley, CA), Leanne Smith (Conway, NH), Chelsea Marshall (Pittsfield, VT), Alice McKennis (Glenwood Springs, CO) and Kaylin Richardson (Edina, MN) are all slated to start Sunday.

Vonn said she was disappointed she will not walk with her teammates during Friday's Opening Ceremony as she continues to rehab her shin, but she'll be there in spirit.

"I'm definitely going to be watching on my TV at home, probably while doing therapy," she said. "For me, I've got to be thinking about my races and my leg and trying to make my shin feel as good as possible before the races. That unfortunately means I won't be able to walk tonight, but I'm sure my teammates are going to have a great time and represent us well."