Vonn to go 'full throttle' in last race of her career

U.S. skier Lindsey Vonn
U.S. skier Lindsey Vonn speeds down the course during the downhill portion of the women's combined, at the alpine ski World Championships in Are, Sweden, on Friday, Feb. 8, 2019.
Alessandro Trovati | AP

Anyone expecting Lindsey Vonn to take it easy in her last race should think again.

Doesn't matter if she's still banged up from a crash with a black eye, a sore rib — not to mention the pain in both of her knees that forced her to move up her retirement.

"Whether I'm ready or not," Vonn said. "I'm just going to go full throttle."

It will be a fitting way to go out for the record-setting skier in Sunday's downhill at the world championships.

Norwegian great Aksel Lund Svindal set the stage for Vonn by winning the silver medal in the men's downhill Saturday in his last race.

American skier Lindsey Vonn
American skier Lindsey Vonn speeds down the course during a women's World Cup super-G in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, on Sunday, Jan. 20, 2019.
Marco Trovati | AP

"She didn't win 82 World Cups by being lucky," Svindal said. "If she gets a medal, it wouldn't surprise me at all. It just comes down to that one day and it has to happen tomorrow. Good luck!"

Vonn's 82 wins are the most all time by a female skier and trail only the 86 won by Swedish great Ingemark Stenmark.

To honor Stenmark, Vonn will wear a race suit featuring the colors of the Swedish flag, blue and yellow.

"Obviously we're in Sweden but also because of Stenmark and how much he has meant to the sport," Vonn said. "It's obviously something that has motivated me for a long time — his record — so I'm just paying my respects to him and this country."

Along with Vonn's dad, two of her siblings and one of her best friends, Stenmark will also be in attendance.

"I've been texting him and he wasn't planning on being here and I was like, 'Please, please, please,' and so he's coming," Vonn said. "I'm really, really, really excited."

As the 34-year-old Vonn performed interviews following downhill training Friday, a U.S. team member helped keep her muscles from tightening up with an cordless electrical vibration massage device. She's still recovering from her crash in super-G on Tuesday.

"I'm really stiff," she said. "Things are pulling in ways they shouldn't be pulling and sometimes my ribs come out. It's not something that's new to me. Usually I can manage to where it's not a problem."

The downhill is scheduled to start at 12:30 p.m. local time, and Vonn will be the third skier on course.

A medal would bring Vonn full circle: Her two silvers at the 2007 worlds in Are were the first major championship successes of her career. She also won the downhill in Are at last year's World Cup finals.

"I have a lot of great memories in Are," Vonn said. "I really feel Sweden feels like home to me, very similar like Minnesota, flat and cold. I love it, it's beautiful."

Afterward, it will be time to celebrate.

"Oh yeah," she said. "Full on, full gas, all day."