Sports
Liverpool win again, but lose Isak to injury. Now what? Plus: Barça ride their luck, more
The final weekend of action before the holidays gave us plenty to talk about and sustain us, even as several top European leagues — including Spain’s LaLiga and the German Bundesliga — are now on winter break. In the Premier League, Liverpool bested Tottenham, who dropped to nine men before full time thanks to two red cards, though Reds boss Arne Slot has a lot to still figure out from defense to attack despite their three-game win streak.
And Man United’s latest defeat — coupled with losing Bruno Fernandes to injury — gives them a chance to recalibrate over the holidays. Is Ruben Amorim up to the task?
Barcelona defied logic (as they often do) to get a win at Villarreal despite a slew of injury absences and star playing in unfamiliar positions. (Credit Hansi Flick for finding a way to get it done.) We also got talking points galore for Bayern Munich (who’ve had an amazing 2025), Paris Saint-Germain (who claimed the Intercontinental Cup this weekend), Newcastle (who let another 2-0 slip and had to settle for a draw vs. Chelsea), Juventus, Atlético Madrid and much more.
It’s Monday morning, so what better time for some musings? Let’s get into it.
– Dawson: Man United’s issues exposed as Villa enter title race
– Ogden: Arsenal are ‘Christmas champions,’ but may count for nothing
– Lindop, Olley: Liverpool win marred by Isak injury; pressure on Frank
Three big points for Liverpool, but still plenty to do
It’s now three wins on the spin for Slot and Liverpool after Saturday’s 2-1 win over Tottenham, but more telling is the fact that before Xavi Simons‘ first-half red card, at 11 vs. 11, Virgil van Dijk‘s header was the only shot they could muster. How did they do with a man advantage? A little better: seven shots for an xG of 0.52. Still worse than Tottenham‘s — that’s Spurs, not Barcelona — 10 shots for 0.57 xG.
It’s a sign of how much work Slot has to do. Packing the team with midfielders does give you more control, but it can also rob you of service to the frontman. He tried to address it by sending on Alexander Isak at halftime, and he did score the opening goal, only to get injured in the process. (Initial reports don’t look good, either.) That’s a stroke of bad luck beyond anyone’s control, but without him on the pitch (and with Cody Gakpo injured and Mohamed Salah at the Africa Cup of Nations), Slot had no choice but to send on fullback Jeremie Frimpong in hope of finding some width.
In other words, Liverpool’s balance still isn’t there, and this setup isn’t viable in the long term because there are no midfield options off the bench. And with Isak presumably out for a while, the two-striker plus diamond setup doesn’t seem like it won’t be an option until the new year, when Gakpo — and possibly Salah, who apologized to his teammates after his outburst — return. And for all the talk of midfield and attack, it’s still the back four that needs the most work: witness the goal given up to Richarlison.
For all the road bumps, Liverpool are fourth in the table and level on points with Chelsea. Maybe they’re out of the title race, but there’s still plenty of room for a strong finish.
2:24
Laurens: Thomas Frank is the main problem at Tottenham
Julien Laurens explains why he believes Tottenham manager Thomas Frank is responsible for the team’s poor run of results.
Across the way, Thomas Frank continues to insist he’s “comfortable and confident.” To be fair to him, Tottenham got a bit unlucky with Hugo Ekitike‘s goal — how VAR missed him putting both hands on the defender’s back is beyond me — and, more importantly, they showed plenty of fight when a man down.
That’s sort of all they showed, however, and that’s a problem for Frank. Once Simons went off, there was little creativity beyond Mohammed Kudus running into blind alleys, and Randal Kolo Muani on his own up front doesn’t feel like a viable option. The spirit is there, the identity less so, and the ability to score by anything other than set pieces or north-south runs even lesser still.
It’s not that Frank’s Spurs team haven’t adopted his Brentford values; it’s that too often, they resemble Brentford on a really bad day.
Barcelona’s flaws are evident, but still they rise
Same stuff, different week. Barcelona simply defy gravity and logic, with critics like me ending up with even more egg on our faces. They went away to Villarreal and won 2-0, something no LaLiga team had managed to do in nine months. They did it without Pedri, with Gerard Martín impersonating a central defender, Eric García impersonating a holding midfielder and Ferran Torres impersonating a center forward.
1:50
Who has the edge in the LaLiga title race?
The ‘ESPN FC’ crew react to Barcelona beating Villarreal 2-0 in LaLiga.
Did they get a little lucky? Sure. Villarreal also happened to be missing a bunch of regulars (Santiago Mouriño, Juan Foyth, Pape Gueye, Gerard Moreno, Thomas Partey). Barça’s usual defensive foibles gifted them two clear-cut early chances. Renato Veiga‘s prison-worthy tackle from behind on Lamine Yamal after 38 minutes was needless and gave Flick’s crew a man advantage, though Barça’s first half saw them manage just four shots from open play.
However, Barça are maddeningly resilient and even on a day when Flick conceded they were “tired,” they know how to pick their spots and make the individual quality count, whether it’s Raphinha in transition or Joan García between the sticks. They end 2025 four points clear at the top of LaLiga, defying the critics. Flick, for now, is vindicated.

Aston Villa roll on, while Bruno’s injury is an opportunity for Man United
Aston Villa were in the relegation zone less than three months ago and now, after 12 wins in 13 league games — and 10 on the spin in all competition — they’re third, three points behind table-topping Arsenal. Sorcery and witchcraft? Possibly. Or maybe it’s just that Unai Emery can squeeze the best out of players, both individually and collectively, better than most.
Against an injury-hit Manchester United, Villa suffered a bit against the press early, found the “out ball” to Morgan Rogers to take the lead, absorbed the body blow of conceding the equalizer on a craven individual error just before the half, took the lead again with Rogers, and then shut the door, Emery-style, limiting United to low quality chances and hit-and-hopes (except for one Matheus Cunha shot). Fine margins, sure, but it’s the little man in black who again ends up on top, usually by outcoaching the opposition.
2:34
Dawson: Man Utd won’t cope if Bruno Fernandes is injured
Janusz Michallik and Rob Dawson speak after Aston Villa’s 2-1 win over Manchester United in the Premier League.
As for United, Amorim had seven players unavailable (including four first-team regulars) and lost Bruno Fernandes at halftime, so yes, there are plenty of mitigating factors. Chasing the game with a midfield partnership of Lisandro Martínez (a center back returning from injury) and Jack Fletcher (a debutant) isn’t easy, and Bruno’s absence in the coming games won’t help.
However, it’s also a chance for Amorim to experiment. Not with systems — he’s not going to do that — but with personnel and approaches. And maybe he can give some of his players the chance to seize the opportunity and step up, something that isn’t easy to do when Bruno is on the pitch.
Quick hits
10. Paris Saint-Germain celebrate “other” world title by cruising in the cup: It was always going to be a foregone conclusion against fifth-tier Fontenay Foot — who are separated from PSG by some 132 teams in the French pyramid — so the 4-0 French Cup win on Saturday isn’t particularly noteworthy. More interesting, I think, is the fallout from their victory over Flamengo on penalties in the Intercontinental Cup on Wednesday.
In case you lost track, this is the competition previously known as the Club World Cup (but also, originally, called the Intercontinental Cup way back when) that pits continental winners from the six FIFA confederations. It was renamed to avoid confusion with the 32-team Club World Cup held in the U.S. last summer. That tournament ended with PSG losing 3-0 to Chelsea in the final.
Some will scoff at the notion that the Intercontinental Cup makes up for it — and yes, any trophy you win by winning a single game is somewhat off-brand — but for PSG, it’s actually a big deal. You increasingly get the sense that silverware and international exposure, at least for the club’s business model, is just as important as success in Ligue 1. If not more.
0:59
Kane ‘extremely proud’ to break Bundesliga record with 100th goal contribution
Harry Kane speaks after becoming the fastest player to reach 100 Bundesliga goal contributions.
9. Bayern crush Heidenheim to end 2025 in style: What can you say about a team that has played 25 games and dropped points on just three occasions? It’s scary good? And it’s even scarier now that Alphonso Davies is back (turning in a half-hour cameo after his three minutes in the Champions League the week before) and Jamal Musiala is on his way?
Whatever suggestion they were taking their foot off the gas heading into the holiday break after the 2-2 draw with Mainz last weekend was wiped away. With a makeshift midfield (Raphaël Guerreiro and Leon Goretzka), with 17-year-old Lennart Karl in a starring role and with nine players missing, it was still the usual one-way traffic. Oh, and Harry Kane is on pace to score 48 league goals, which would pulverize Robert Lewandowski‘s mark of 41.
8. Lucky — but deserving — Arsenal roll on: Yes, both things can be true. Arsenal deserved all three points away to Everton because they limited the opposition to 0.20 xG and created the better chances, while also hitting the post via Leandro Trossard. They were also lucky that Jake O’Brien had a massive brain fart and conceded a penalty, defending a header like an NBA center contesting a driving layup. And they were lucky that the William Saliba/Thierno Barry tussle didn’t go the other way: Saliba kicks Barry’s foot and pulls his shirt; Barry yanks Saliba by the wrist. It was the classic case where a ref might call a penalty just as easily as he may opt for a non-call.
That said, Mikel Arteta will be pleased. This is the grind part of the season, when it’s far too easy to drop points on the road, when regulars start to flag and when, despite the deep bench, you’re not sure if and when to rotate. Navigating this time with Manchester City on their heels is a huge test.
1:34
Burley & Nicol slam missed penalty call for Everton vs. Arsenal
Craig Burley and Steve Nicol can’t believe Everton weren’t awarded a penalty in Arsenal’s 2-1 win.
7. Juventus outclass AS Roma with Luciano Spalletti righting the ship: That Tommaso Baldanzi goal with 15 minutes to go to make it 2-1 could have created a panic, but Juventus were extremely grown up as they made it six wins in seven games across all competitions. The front three — this version featuring Francisco Conceição, Kenan Yildiz and Loïs Openda — created chances with help from the wing backs, Andrea Cambiaso and Weston McKennie. Let’s not get carried away: Juve haven’t turned into Flick’s Barcelona, but there’s no denying this is much more of a front-foot team than it was.
Roma did have a bunch of absentees, but the way Juve approached the game, especially in the first half, showed courage and quality — two things that were lacking prior to Spalletti’s arrival. I’m not fully sold on this trio of forwards — Conceição seems one-dimensional, Openda on his own seems a stretch — but they were impressive on Saturday and ideal foils for the budding genius of Yildiz. Don’t expect this front three to be set in stone (Jonathan David and Edon Zhegrova are in the mix too), because it’s Spalletti after all. But confidence is definitely growing.
6. Man City impress, but contrarian Pep Guardiola demands improvement: Maybe we ought to be used to it by now. Maybe it’s some sort Jordan-esque demand for perfection. Maybe he’s just messing with us. But you certainly didn’t expect the City boss to complain after the 3-0 win over West Ham United (their seventh in a row) that they “need to improve,” “create more chances,” and “be brave.” Not in a game that saw them 2-0 up at halftime, with Opta recording five “big chances” before the break and West Ham managing zero shots of any kind.
City are by no means flawless — though this was better than some of their recent minimalist wins — but if there’s an issue it’s likely at the back, where things can get a little ropey (indeed, Gianluigi Donnarumma had to make a couple big saves) and sometimes in midfield, where the much-missed Rodri has effectively been replaced by two guys (Nico González alongside Bernardo Silva). Still, you’re not going to argue with Pep’s record. Whatever buttons he needs to push, he’ll push, and he’ll often be proved right.
1:19
Have Man City gained momentum in the title race?
Steve Nicol assesses Manchester City’s Premier League title prospects after they move top of the table with a win over West Ham.
5. What year is it exactly at Atletico Madrid? OK, that’s a bit unkind. But when Koke opens the scoring with a wonder goal, Jan Oblak makes two huge saves and Antoine Griezmann scores to make it 3-0 away at Girona, you kind of wonder. Because all three were key men for Atleti a decade ago under Diego Simeone who, of course, is still there too. All three are doing it again now (Griezmann albeit in a cameo role, though eight goals by Christmas is not insignificant).
This was supposed to be the season Koke and Griezmann got phased out (not Oblak, he’s eternal) and instead, they’re carving out important roles for themselves.
4. Newcastle United are kicking themselves … again: No team in the Premier League has dropped more points from leading positions than Newcastle, and few things are more frustrating to a coach. You can look at this game and conclude that manager Eddie Howe should blame the officiating: Alejandro Garnacho and Reece James both could have been sent off, and Anthony Gordon should have had a penalty when Trevoh Chalobah bundled into him. Or you can look at it and rue the individual errors, whether the numerous chances Nick Woltemade squandered (in addition to the two goals he scored) or Malick Thiaw getting entirely turned around on Chelsea’s equalizer.
Just as big a concern, I think, was Newcastle’s passivity in the second half. With that crowd behind you and playing as well as they did in the first half, it’s hard to explain.
3. Chelsea’s Enzo Maresca happier with results than performance: But at least he’s not talking about the “unhappiest 48 hours” and a “lack of support.” Does it mean everything is fixed? Probably not. But he’s a professional, he has a contract through 2029, and it’s in nobody’s interest to change managers now. You just hope the people he was talking about got the message.
Beyond that, he said after Saturday’s 2-2 draw at Newcastle that there were areas of improvement, but he’s happy with the results of the past week and believes his team is “moving in the right direction.” I’m not going to argue there. Chelsea arguably haven’t delivered a consistent 11 vs. 11 performance over 90 minutes in more than a month. And while the comeback against Newcastle showed resilience and spirit, you get the sense it’s still a long, long journey.
2. A win, but still issues for Real Madrid as Kylian Mbappé matches Cristiano Ronaldo (not really): The last thing Xabi Alonso needed was two weeks of speculation over his future. However, three wins on the bounce — including Saturday’s 2-0 win over Sevilla — ought to do the trick … at least for now. Because the performance still isn’t there, just as it wasn’t against Alaves and against Talavera(!) in the cup. Real Madrid are winning because of moments from brilliant players (and they have more than most) while still looking wobbly at the back.
One of those brilliant players, of course, is Mbappé and in the endless search for snappy stats, you might have read that he scored his 59th goal of the calendar year, equaling Ronaldo’s total for 2013. These sorts of records are frankly silly, largely because you don’t need them to tell you how huge Mbappé has been for Real Madrid. But to provide a bit of context — and appease the Cristianoholics out there — Mbappé did it in 59 games, Ronaldo in 50. Oh, and 13 of Mbappé’s goals came from the penalty spot compared to just nine for Ronaldo.
1. Italian Supercoppa in Saudi Arabia is a dud for (almost) all involved: I say “almost” because the losing semifinalists, AC Milan and Internazionale, will earn €2.4 million each while Bologna and Napoli, who meet in the final Monday night, will split €16.2 million. So yeah, there’s that. But when you consider that last month’s Milan vs. Inter derby pulled in €8.6 million at the box office, maybe the €4.8 million the two Milan clubs are splitting isn’t all that much. Sure, the €8.6 million is revenue, not profit, but still.
The Italian Supercoppa in Saudi was sold as a way to reach new audiences. Well, neither semifinal sold out a stadium that holds less than 25,000. (And let’s not even get started on the spectacle of Milan coach Max Allegri losing his rag — not for the first time — with the Napoli bench.). And before you ask, I seriously doubt it moves the needle at all for Saudi fans, who have their own star-studded league.
Would winning be a deal for Bologna or Napoli? Sure, a trophy would be great. But it would obviously be a pittance compared to what got them there: Bologna’s Coppa Italia triumph last season and Napoli’s Scudetto. Is this all really worth it?
Sports
PSL 11: Hyderabad team unveiled amid cricketing fanfare, celebrity turnout
HYDERABAD: The official name and logo of the seventh Pakistan Super League (PSL) franchise were unveiled on Saturday at a star-studded ceremony at Niaz Stadium, marking the team’s formal entry into the tournament.
The franchise, which was acquired by FKS Group for staggering Rs 1.75 billion at the historic auction at the Jinnah Convention Centre in Islamabad last month, has now been named ‘Hyderabad Houston Kingsmen’.
Besides the nomenclature, the logo of the team was also unveiled during the ceremony and was shared on the franchise’s official social media handles.
“The pitch has a new ruler. The game has a new power. Presenting the Hyderabad Houston Kingsmen,” the caption read. “Let our [PSL] reign begin.”
The development came the following day, the franchise announced signing five players, including Pakistan’s Saim Ayub and Marnus Labuschagne, leading into the historic players auction, scheduled to be held on February 11.
The Houston Kingsmen roped in Ayub for Rs126 million in the Platinum category, followed by Usman for Rs46.2 million in the Diamond, while Maaz and Akif were signed for Rs35 million and Rs19.6 million in the Emerging and Gold categories, respectively.
Labuschagne, on the other hand, joined Hyderabad as a direct signing for an undisclosed amount.
For the unversed, the franchise has also strengthened its coaching panel ahead of the historic edition by bringing in high-profile international names.
Former Pakistan red-ball head coach and Australian all-rounder Jason Gillespie will lead as head coach, with Grant Bradburn joining as fielding coach, Craig White as assistant coach, Hanif Malik as batting coach and Zac Martin taking charge of strength and conditioning.
The eleventh edition of the PSL will see a historic change as the traditional player draft has been replaced by a player auction, while the league itself expands to eight teams for the first time.
This expansion marks a significant milestone in PSL history, following the entry of Multan Sultans in Season 3, which increased the number of teams from five to six.
With the addition of Hyderabad and Sialkot, the league will now feature eight competing teams.
Sports
At Winter Olympics, protest over cost and ICE ends in clash with police
After left-wing groups rallied against the cost and environmental impact of the Winter Games in Italy, some protesters set off fireworks and hurled bottles.
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Lindsey Vonn is ready for the Winter Olympics despite injury
LINDSEY VONN HAS waited a long time for this. After Thursday’s downhill training was canceled due to heavy snowfall and Friday’s practice was delayed more than 90 minutes by fog, Vonn pushed out of a start gate for the first time this Olympics.
The 10th skier to drop, she skied smoothly and confidently and led through most of the course before making a couple of errors over the rollers at the bottom and finishing with the 11th-best time of the day. Her run was remarkable for how unremarkable it was.
Just three days earlier, Vonn announced that she would still compete at these Olympics despite completely tearing the ACL in her left knee a few days before. Making it through a training run in front of the world would prove to her and everyone else that she is fit to compete Sunday.
“This felt like race day to me,” her coach Aksel Lund Svindal said Friday. “You know her history. She’s gone hard at times when people have told her she probably shouldn’t be in the start gate.”
Vonn has been in this position before. The story of these Olympics is the story of her career: long streaks of unparalleled success interrupted by injury — often just before or during an Olympics.
At the 2006 Games, she crashed in a downhill training run, was airlifted from the mountain and returned two days later to finish eighth. In 2010, she suffered a deep shin bruise she called the most painful injury of her life. She won the downhill. In 2014, she missed the Games with a partial ACL tear, and in 2018, she skied with a chunk of cartilage dislodged in her right knee.
She wanted this time to be different. She came into this season as strong as she’s been in a decade. She was pain-free. And she was winning again.
But ski racing is risky, and Vonn skis on the edge. “Because I push the limits, I crash, and I’ve been injured more times than I would like to admit — to myself, even,” she said Tuesday.
10:22
Lindsey Vonn on grief, growth and her second chance at ski racing
Lindsey Vonn reflects on the physical and emotional pain that shaped her final Olympics, the self‑discovery that followed retirement, and the joy and confidence fueling her return to ski racing.
“I’ve been working really hard to come into these Games in a much different position [than in years past],” Vonn said. “I know what my chances were before the crash, and I know my chances aren’t the same as it stands today. But I know there’s still a chance, and as long as there’s a chance, I will try.”
Vonn will take her chance at the downhill on Sunday at her fifth Olympics. She said she is not in pain and her knee feels stable. She posted videos of herself doing squats and speed workouts in the gym this week and took a second training run Saturday, where she was more than two seconds faster than the day before. Svindel said he saw symmetry in her skiing and that her left- and right-footed turns looked equally strong.
Although this isn’t how Vonn imagined her final Olympics starting, it’s hard to think of a more fitting place for the 41-year-old to end her ski racing career. She made her first World Cup podium in Cortina as a teenager in 2004, and her 12 World Cup wins here are more than any other skier has earned at a single venue.
“I never thought I would be in this position,” Vonn said in late October. She was in New York ahead of the World Cup season and unaware of how the next few months would go — that she would win the first downhill race of the year or that by the time she arrived in Cortina, the world would be wondering once again if she could even race.
But had she known what lay ahead, Vonn likely would have said something similar to what she did Tuesday: Her return isn’t about wins or losses, but rather about showing up in the start gate and trying. She is not letting this injury derail her second chance at ending her career on her terms.
“If it had been anywhere else, I would probably say it’s not worth it,” Vonn said. “But for me, there’s something special about Cortina that always pulls me back, and it’s pulled me back one last time.”
BY ANY MEASURE, even without this comeback, Vonn’s career has been spectacular. When she retired at 34, she had more World Cup wins, 82, than any woman and the second most in history, after Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark’s 86. Vonn’s American teammate, Mikaela Shiffrin, has since surpassed both skiers, with 108 World Cup wins and counting, but Vonn still holds the record for the most downhill wins by any skier, male or female. She is also the only American woman to win gold in the downhill at the Olympics.
But she didn’t retire on her terms.
Instead, Vonn’s body made the decision for her. She suffered a devastating string of injuries, underwent multiple ACL and MCL repairs and skied through constant pain. By the 2018 Olympics in Pyeongchang, she could barely bend her right knee or straighten it entirely.
A year later, she competed in her final world championships. Ahead of her last race, knowing how much pain she was pushing through, Vonn’s longtime coach, Erich Sailer, who died last August, told her, “What’s 90 seconds in a lifetime?” She earned bronze and said goodbye to the sport. “When I said I was retired, I was retired,” Vonn says. “I really, truly built my life outside of skiing in a meaningful way.”
In retirement, she embraced being a beginner. She tried car racing, rodeo roping and wrote a book. She shared about her adventures with her beloved rescue dogs, her mental health and her time with family and friends. Experiencing life beyond the isolated world of elite ski racing provided her better perspective and built her self-confidence off skis.
In August 2022, Vonn lost her mother, Linda, who died after a yearlong battle with ALS. Her mother’s life inspired how Vonn lived. Her death influenced Vonn’s decision to return to racing.
“My mother in general, her attitude has always inspired my comebacks,” Vonn said in October. “Her passing makes me realize even more that life is short. I’m given this opportunity and I can’t take that for granted.
“And if I fail, who cares?” she said. “I’ve already won everything. Someone asked me if not being successful at the Olympics would tarnish my legacy. No, because I tried. My legacy is not about winning, it’s about trying.”
Vonn underwent a partial knee replacement in April 2024, and within a month, she could straighten her leg fully and perform exercises she hadn’t done in years. She started to dream.
Knowing the next Winter Games were in Cortina gave her a goal, and she returned to the sport as a better skier than when she retired. “I’m generating speed off my right side, which I haven’t in a very long time,” Vonn said in October. “My right-footed turn is my best turn. I don’t know the last time that’s been the case.” That will be crucial here in Cortina as she adapts to a new injury to her left knee.
Vonn also added 12 pounds of muscle ahead of this season and increased her overall strength and agility, all of which — along with a knee brace — will help stabilize her injured knee. In August, she began working with Svindal, a two-time Olympic champion for Norway who retired the same month she did in 2019.
So far this season, Vonn has finished on the podium in five of five World Cup downhill races and won two, in addition to earning two podiums in three Super-G races.
Vonn said yes to this comeback for two simple reasons: because she can, and because she believes she can win, especially in Cortina. Despite the injury, both things are still true. She knows this course. She knows where and how to push its limits and she said Tuesday that when she’s in the start gate, she won’t be thinking about her knee. She’ll be thinking about skiing fast.
“I love everything about the Cortina track,” Vonn said last year. “I understand it well. In downhill, it’s all about seeing the fall line and being able to carry speed. I know the places where I can make a mistake and where I can’t, the places I have to accelerate. Overall, I have a great feel for what it takes to ski fast there.”
If VONN BELIEVES in anything, it’s second chances.
In the summer of 2025, less than a year after she announced her return, Vonn’s sister suggested she adopt a new companion to travel the World Cup circuit with her. “She said, ‘You’re much happier when you have a dog with you,'” Vonn said.
Vonn was still mourning the loss of Lucy, her Cavalier King Charles spaniel who traveled everywhere with her, even sitting next to her at dinners and in Olympic news conferences. But in August, she started looking. She scrolled through listings on an adoption website and on the very last page, she saw him: a Cavalier King Charles spaniel puppy with a cute brown face cleaved by a white hourglass stripe. And he already had the perfect name: Chance.
“I was like, ‘This is poetic,'” Vonn said. “This is my boy. This is my second chance.”
Chance has been by her side all season.
In October, she took him on his first international trip to a training camp in Chile, and he’s been traveling with her nonstop since. Vonn carries her mom and Lucy with her, too, racing in a helmet featuring their initials, as well as the first initial of seven others she’s lost in recent years: her grandparents, Sailer and another beloved rescue dog, Bear. She calls the group her “angel army.”
After she won her first World Cup downhill race in nearly seven years in December, Vonn posted a photo of Chance on the couch in her hotel room in St. Moritz next to her trophies. “This weekend was amazing in so many ways,” she wrote. “All the work that was put in over the past year is coming together … The best is yet to come.”
No matter what happens in the downhill Sunday, Chance will surely be waiting for Vonn in her hotel room with a wagging tail and unconditional support.
“This is all icing on the cake,” Vonn said this week. “I never expected to be here. I felt like this was an amazing opportunity to close out my career in a way that I wanted to. Hasn’t gone exactly the way I wanted, but I don’t want to have any regrets.”
This season, Vonn allowed herself to dream of Olympic gold again. Although her injury has made winning the downhill an uphill battle, she still believes it is possible. On Sunday, she’ll remember the advice Sailer gave her in 2019: What’s 90 seconds in a lifetime?
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