The Day

< Lindsey Vonn of the United States celebrates after winning a women’s World Cup Super-G race in Val d’Isere, France on Saturday.

- By JEROME PUGMIRE AP Sports Writer

Val d’Isere, France — With her father proudly watching from the bottom of the slope, Lindsey Vonn sped to an emotional win in a World Cup super-G race on Saturday.

It was her first win of a difficult season so far, one marred by a crash and a recent back injury, and it brought both of them to tears.

Alan Kildow, wearing a white ski hat with the name of the French resort written on it, was tearful as his daughter won 12 years after clinching a downhill win here — the third win of the record 78 she cherishes.

The 33-year-old American ski star has seven wins and 10 podiums at Val d’Isere, but her father missed the others.

“He’s never been to Val d’Isere,” Vonn said. “It was really cute when he was crying at the finish.”

After Vonn finished 12th in downhill at Lake Louise in early December, a day after crashing in the season-opening downhill, she turned to him for moral support.

“I asked my dad if he could come to some races with me. My dad’s always the one who says, ‘Never, never give up.’ He loves Winston Churchill,” Vonn said. “It’s nice to be able to share these moments with my dad as I approach the end of my career. It’s also time to appreciate things more, also with the passing of my grandpa.”

Then it was Vonn’s turn to cry as she struggled to finish her sentence.

“So, I feel really a lot closer to him when we’re together,” she said, her voice breaking with emotion. “When I’m able to ski well, I feel like I do it for him as well.”

On an Oreiller-Killy course shortened due to heavy snowfall in the past two days, the four-time World Cup winner clocked 1 minute, 4.86 seconds. Italian Sofia Goggia placed second in 1:05.17 — her 14th World Cup podium — and Norwegian Ragnhild Mowinckel was third in 1:05.25.

It was Vonn’s first win since a downhill at Garmisch-Partenkirc­hen in January, and a welcome relief.

Last Saturday, she jarred her back in a super-G at St. Moritz in Switzerlan­d and finished in 24th place. In clear pain, she pulled out of the next day’s scheduled super-G.

“My back’s much better. I went to Austria and got some therapy, saw a doctor and it definitely helped a lot,” Vonn said. “The physical issues that I’ve had made it hard to have confidence in my body, so it was mentally challengin­g. That’s been the biggest thing in the last few weeks — keep going, keep fighting.”

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 ?? GABRIELE FACCIOTTI/AP PHOTO ?? Lindsey Vonn of the United States during Saturday’s women’s World Cup super-G in Val d’Isere, France. Vonn, who was forced to withdraw from a race in Switzerlan­d a week earlier due to a back injury, bounced back to win her first race of the season.
GABRIELE FACCIOTTI/AP PHOTO Lindsey Vonn of the United States during Saturday’s women’s World Cup super-G in Val d’Isere, France. Vonn, who was forced to withdraw from a race in Switzerlan­d a week earlier due to a back injury, bounced back to win her first race of the season.

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