Lindsey Vonn plans to compete in Olympics despite torn ACL sustained in fall

Lindsey Vonn's extraordinary comeback after nearly six years away from ski racing will not be derailed bya fall suffered last week in Switzerland. Vonn announced Tuesday that she had ruptured her right ACL, but after some pre-Olympics practice runs, she will continue to ski at Cortina d'Ampezzo in the2026 Winter Olympics.

"This is not, obviously, what I had hoped for," Vonn said in a news conference Tuesday. "I've been working really hard to come into these Games in a much different position. 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."

The 41-year-old American also announced that she suffered bone bruising and meniscal damage in the fall that occurred one week before the Opening Ceremony of these Games.

"Considering how my knee feels," Vonn said, "I feel stable, I feel strong, my knee is not swollen, and with the help of a knee brace, I am confident that I can compete on Sunday."

Sunday would be the women's downhill, an event Vonn won at the 2010 Olympics.

Vonn got off-balance coming out of a jump in the upper section of the World Cup downhill race in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, on Jan. 30. She was unable to recover and fell at high speed, skidding across the snow before careening into the orange safety netting on the side of the course.

Here is the replay of Lindsey Vonn's crash:#FISAlpine|#WorldCupCransMontanapic.twitter.com/1xhAuQanP0

— Team USA Olympics Updates and Coverage (@TeamUSAOLYCov)January 30, 2026

While Vonn was able to get to her feet, and slowly and gingerly make her down the rest of the course, she stopped several times to grasp at her left knee and appeared to avoid putting any weight on it. Vonn was airlifted from the race area as a precaution.

Later on Jan. 30, Vonn expressed optimism via Instagram that her "Olympic dream is not over." She wrote that she was "discussing the situation" with doctors and "will continue to undergo further exams."

"This is a very difficult outcome one week before the Olympics … but if there's one thing I know how to do, it's a comeback," Vonn added.

Now, she'll attempt to come back from yet another injury, this time just days before the Olympics are set to begin.

Vonn wasn't the only skier to crash amid adverse conditions and poor visibility in Crans-Montana. Austria's Nina Ortlieb and Norway's Marte Monsen, two of the five skiers who started before Vonn, also failed to complete their runs, prompting organizers to cancel the rest of the competition.

"The main reason is the safety of the athletes," Women's World Cup race director Peter Gerdol explained. "The visibility was getting worse and worse, they couldn't see the race line properly and it caused mistakes. We saw six athletes starting and all six had some mistakes. This was a sign that it was a high-risk situation."

Vonn was poised to be one of the faces of the Milan Cortina Games thanks to a comeback story that defied all reasonable expectations. Now that story will only gain momentum if she makes it to the starting gate.

The four-time overall World Cup champion and 2010 Olympic downhill gold medalist retired in 2019 because the physical toll of her many injuries had become too much to bear. When she underwent right knee surgery in April 2024, her goal was nothing more than to be able to live a normal, pain-free life.

Vonn felt so much better after her partial knee replacement surgery that she made a stunning announcement in November 2024 that she was un-retiring. She has been dominant in downhill races this World Cup season and finished on the podium in two of her first three super-G races, raising hopes that she can contend for medals in both disciplines in Cortina.

The women's downhill competition is scheduled for Feb. 8 and the women's super-G will take place four days later. Vonn said her plan is still to compete in both.

Vonn could have skipped the notoriously treacherous Crans-Montana downhill, but she chose to race in hopes of accumulating more World Cup points. She entered the raceleading the downhill standingsandsixth in the overall competition.

Rather than playing it safe in poor conditions with the Olympics just days away, Vonn went all-out. She roared out of the start house and registered the fastest time through the first checkpoint.

For better or worse, Vonn was always going to go for it.

"Unfortunately, in my career, I've had a lot of challenges," Vonn said. "I've always pushed the limits, and in downhill, it's a very dangerous sport, and anything can happen. Because I've pushed the limits, I crash, and I've been injured more times than I would like to ... As many times as I crash, I've always gotten back up, as many times as I've failed, I've always won."

That's how her remarkable comeback made it this far. The question now is, will the injured left allow her to compete at her best.

"I'm not letting this slip through my fingers," Vonn said. "I'm going to do it. End of story."

Lindsey Vonn plans to compete in Olympics despite torn ACL sustained in fall

Lindsey Vonn's extraordinary comeback after nearly six years away from ski racing will not be derailed bya fall suffe...
NFL Pro Bowl: Shedeur Sanders and others are playing flag football Tuesday of Super Bowl Week — with Olympics in mind

The NFL's Pro Bowl is being played Tuesday night in San Francisco ahead ofSuper Bowl LXthis weekend.

Yahoo Sports

Yahoo Sports first reported on the move in New York at the fall owners meetings. Here's a guide to what you need to know about the game.

When and where is the Pro Bowl?

8 p.m. ET Tuesday, at Moscone Center in San Francisco

How can I watch the Pro Bowl?

It will be televised on ESPN.

What is the Pro Bowl format?

Flag football, 50-yard playing field, two 10-yard end zones, touchdowns worth 6 points, with teams allowed to try for 1 point after from the 5-yard line or 2 points after from the 10

Who is playing in the Pro Bowl, and why are some stars skipping it?

Shedeur Sanders,Joe Burrowand other big names. Fans voted on the initial rosters, but for various reasons several high-profile replacements have been selected.

Sanders was selected as a replacement for Drake Maye, who will lead the Patriots in Sunday's Super Bowl against the Seahawks. Burrow is replacing injured Bills quarterback Josh Allen. Joe Flacco, the AFC's third QB, is alsoreplacing an injured Justin Herbert of the Chargers.

The NFC quarterbacks include Detroit's Jared Goff, Philadelphia's Jalen Hurts and Dallas' Dak Prescott. Here are the full Pro Bowl rosters for theNFCandAFC.

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The coaches are two 49ers legends, with Steve Young coaching the AFC and Jerry Rice leading the NFC.

Why are they playing the Pro Bowl on a Tuesday, and why is the format flag football?

The answers to these questions are intertwined, so we'll lump them together. Theformat of the Pro Bowl shifted to include flag footballand skills competitions starting with the 2023 event, in response to feedback from coaches, players and others involved. This was in part to minimize the risk of injury and to refresh an event that had become stagnant overall.

The focus has now moved toward the flag football element with the Olympics in mind. Asreported by Yahoo Sports' Jori Epstein this past fallat the annual league meetings in New York, the NFL is committed to spotlighting flag football on a global stage ahead of the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, when the sport will be introduced into competition for the first time andNFL players will have opportunities to participate.

"We're committed to this flag football format," NFL executive vice president Peter O'Reilly said in the fall. "This is clearly rooted in our commitment to flag and making sure we're honoring players in the right way. There's a broader strategic play here, and that's one of the main reasons we brought it into Super Bowl week."

Why are they playing the Pro Bowl in a convention center?

NFL executive vice president Peter O'Reilly addressed this tooin the fall. He acknowledged the Moscone Center's capacity will be smaller than recent Pro Bowl venues, but the game will nonetheless be ticketed. It's a necessary evil, if you will, of the Pro Bowl being spotlighted during Super Week.

What is the future of the Pro Bowl?

Per Yahoo Sports' Jori Epstein,expect this flag football-in-the-Super-Bowl-host-city format to continue to the Super Bowl's 2027 stage in Los Angeles, which will also host the Olympics in 2028.

There could be, however, a growing issue with player participation.New York Jets QB Justin Fields reportedly declinedto participate this year to focus on his offseason training, and that might become a more common thing as there isn't a ton of upside to taking part.

Players on the winning team willreportedly get $96,000 each,while players on the losing team will reportedly receive $48,000 each. That's a great chunk of change to you and me and a lot of NFL players who line the middle and back ends of rosters — but not to the stars people will pay and watch to see.

Still, there figures to be enough participation from players and backing from the NFL to continue through the target year of the 2028 Olympics. After that, who knows.

NFL Pro Bowl: Shedeur Sanders and others are playing flag football Tuesday of Super Bowl Week — with Olympics in mind

The NFL's Pro Bowl is being played Tuesday night in San Francisco ahead ofSuper Bowl LXthis weekend. Yahoo...
These teams have March Madness bracketology's most polarizing resumes

March Madnessis so ingrained as a national spectacle at this point the controversial selections and snubs are an inevitability, and even an expected part of the show whencollege basketballfans gather on Selection Sunday for the reveal of the bracket.

USA TODAY Sports

Bracketologysprouted from our collective thirst to know what teams must do to hear their name on Selection Sunday, and where those teams might be ranked. So too dida collection of rankingsbased on computer models and formulas and, like last year, seven of those metrics will be listed on the team sheets used by the selection committee as it meets heading into Selection Sunday to determine the field for the 2026 NCAA tournament.

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Each ranking or rating is separated into two distinct categories — predictive metrics and results-based metrics. TheNCAA Evaluation Tool (NET),KenPom,ESPN's BPIandthe Torvik rankingsare considered predictive rankings that measure how good a team is based on its offensive and defensive efficiency, adjusted for opponent strength and location. TheKPI,ESPN's Strength of Record (SOR)andWins Above Bubble (WAB)are results-based rankings that judge how hard it was for a team to attain its résumé.

For many teams, the two types of ratings largely converge by the end of the season. For others, however, there can be a wide swath of outcomes based on how a game was played and whether it was won or lost. These are the schools from major andmid-major conferencesthat could inspire the most robust conversation and debate among committee members, either over their selection into the 2026 NCAA tournament as an at-large and/or their potential seeding in the field, due to the differences between their ranking in predictive metrics and results-based metrics.

Here's an early look at 10 teams with polarizing profiles ahead of Selection Sunday based on the metrics used for the men's NCAA tournament:

MARCH MADNESS BRACKETOLOGY:Houston, Florida rise in NCAA tournament seeding

March Madness 2026: NCAA tournament metrics' most polarizing teams

All records and rankings through games played on Feb.2

Florida(16-6)

  • NET: 12

  • KenPom: 7

  • BPI: 7

  • Torvik: 6

  • KPI: 20

  • SOR: 18

  • WAB: 18

How the NCAA tournament selection committee seeds the defending national champions is developing into a fascinating subplot for Selection Sunday afterFloridadidn't get wins in high-profile nonconference games against Arizona, Duke and UConn. But the Gators remain in the SEC driver's seat with a huge matchup against Texas A&M looming on Feb. 7. Predictive rankings have them already in contention for a top-two seed, but results-based metrics have Florida hovering just inside the top-20. Will committee members give the Gators the benefit of the doubt over teams with fewer losses?

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Louisville(15-6)

  • NET: 17

  • KenPom: 16

  • BPI: 11

  • Torvik: 16

  • KPI: 28

  • SOR: 32

  • WAB: 26

The Cardinals are 11-2 when freshman Mikel Brown is in the lineup, with losses to only Duke and Arkansas, and look poised to return to the NCAA tournament in coach Pat Kelsey's second season. But Louisville is 4-4 without Brown, including three losses in four games last month as ACC play got underway. So the Cardinals are positioned as high as No. 11 in predictive metrics as a result of their ceiling with Brown, but their results-based rankings are as low as No. 32. If those dynamics remain the same over the next month, there will be lingering questions about how Louisville will be seeded by the selection committee.

Indiana(15-7)

  • NET: 30

  • KenPom: 33

  • BPI: 25

  • Torvik: 23

  • KPI: 49

  • SOR: 37

  • WAB: 39

The Hoosiers are as high as No. 23 and as low as No. 49 among the seven metrics used by the NCAA tournament selection committee, with a weak schedule and lack of significant wins until recent triumphs over Purdue and UCLA leaving them in an interesting spot to start February. Indiana hasn't slipped up against inferior competition and had several metric-boosting blowouts to help juice its predictive metrics. The Hoosiers would likely make the NCAA tournament field as an at-large team if Selection Sunday were this week, but they're only a loss or two away from being on the wrong side of the bubble again.

UCF(17-4)

UCF Knights guard Riley Kugel (2) dunks the ball during the second half against the Oklahoma State Cowboys at Gallagher-Iba Arena on Jan. 6, 2026.
  • NET: 37

  • KenPom: 45

  • BPI: 51

  • Torvik: 46

  • KPI: 15

  • SOR: 21

  • WAB: 19

The Knights' résumé won't be straightforward for selection committee members if UCF continues on its current trajectory, with the predictive metrics of a bubble team and results more in line with a top-six seed. The Knights didn't test themselves much in the nonconference schedule, but got a key road win over Texas A&M, already beat Kansas and Texas Tech in Big 12 play and have no bad losses. Coach Johnny Dawkins is having his best season since he last made the NCAA tournament in 2019.

Texas(13-9)

  • NET: 39

  • KenPom: 34

  • BPI: 35

  • Torvik: 38

  • KPI: 63

  • SOR: 54

  • WAB: 52

The Longhorns could present challenges for the committee if they linger along the NCAA tournament bubble around Selection Sunday. Their predictive metrics rank among the top-40 after some impressive SEC wins over Vanderbilt and Alabama last month, but they've also got a Quad 3 loss at home to Mississippi State and only one nonconference win of note on their résumé. Texas still has chances to boost its profile with games looming against Florida, Texas A&M and Arkansas at the end of SEC play, but its profile can't withstand too many more setbacks.

Washington(12-10)

  • NET: 47

  • KenPom: 46

  • BPI: 44

  • Torvik: 44

  • KPI: 64

  • SOR: 60

  • WAB: 60

The Huskies would be a fascinating test case if Selection Sunday were this week instead of next month as no Big Ten team has a wider gap between its metrics. The predictive rankings are all mostly the same, ranging from No. 43-47, and put Washington on the bubble. The results-based rankings are similar as well, only those range from No. 60-64 because of the team's 10 losses. That would put the Huskies in danger of missing the NCAA tournament. None of those defeats, however, are outside of the first two quadrants.

California(16-6)

  • NET: 51

  • KenPom: 54

  • BPI: 69

  • Torvik: 56

  • KPI: 40

  • SOR: 48

  • WAB: 41

The predictive metrics haven't caught up to the results-based metrics after Cal knocked off UNC, Stanford and Miami to emerge from a three-game losing skid. TheGolden Bearshave played their way onto the NCAA tournament bubble and have no bad losses on their ledger. A few closer-than-expected results facing a weak nonconference schedule leaves them limited margin for error the next month.

Oklahoma State(15-6)

  • NET: 68

  • KenPom: 57

  • BPI: 71

  • Torvik: 70

  • KPI: 46

  • SOR: 44

  • WAB: 46

The Cowboys look like they could provide a window into how the NCAA tournament selection committee judges a team that does well in nonconference play only to then stumble in conference action. Oklahoma State is considered the 12th-best team in the Big 12 by predictive metrics after it started league play with five losses in eight games. But it's nearly 22 spots higher nationally, on average, in results-based metrics thanks to early wins over Texas A&M, USF, Northwestern and Grand Canyon that have aged better than expected. The Cowboys still have a shot based on the strength of the Big 12.

George Mason(20-2)

  • NET: 65

  • KenPom: 76

  • BPI: 68

  • Torvik: 108

  • KPI: 35

  • SOR: 40

  • WAB: 43

This one-time Final Four phenomenon could be poised for another mid-major NCAA tournament run involving a borderline Selection Sunday résumé. The Patriots have won 20 of their first 22 games, but both losses came in rare Quad 1 or 2 opportunities. Their predictive metrics continue to lag significantly when compared to their results-based rankings. It doesn't help thatGeorge Masonwon't face Atlantic-10 Conference favorite Saint Louis until its regular-season finale. The Patriots need more quality win opportunities.

Miami (Ohio)(22-0)

  • NET: 53

  • KenPom: 90

  • BPI: 91

  • Torvik: 80

  • KPI: 54

  • SOR: 24

  • WAB: 33

The undefeated darlings of the MACcould present the NCAA tournament selection committee with a real issue to sort through if they were to get upset before claiming the league's automatic berth into March Madness. KenPom and ESPN's BPI have Miami rated outside the top 75 with no Quad 1 wins, but the RedHawks rank among the top 35 in ESPN's strength of record and the NCAA's wins above bubble metrics thanks to their unblemished record. Would Miami with one or two losses merit an at-large berth on Selection Sunday?

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NCAA bracketology 2026: March Madness metrics unsure of these 10 teams

These teams have March Madness bracketology's most polarizing resumes

March Madnessis so ingrained as a national spectacle at this point the controversial selections and snubs are an inevitab...
French prosecutors seek public office ban for Le Pen but leave door open to presidential bid

By Elissa Darwish and Ingrid Melander

Reuters

PARIS, Feb 3 (Reuters) - French prosecutors on Tuesday requested a five-year ban on running for public office for far-right leader Marine Le Pen in her appeal ​trial over the misuse of European Union funds, but said this should not be enforced immediately.

This ‌leaves the question of Le Pen's 2027 presidential election candidacy wide open if the appeals court, when it delivers its ruling in ‌the coming months, follows the prosecutors' requests. It has no obligation to do so.

The initial ruling, in March last year, was a major setback for Le Pen as it banned her from running for office for five years, effective immediately.

In that ruling, a court said that Le Pen had been "at the heart" of a scheme to misappropriate ⁠more than 4 million euros of ‌EU funds and use them to pay the far-right party's staff back home.

The prosecutors maintained on Tuesday that Le Pen was guilty, urging the appeal court to rule accordingly ‍and deliver a 4-year jail term, three of which would be suspended and one of which would be served at home with an electronic tag.

The RN and other party figures were also guilty of diverting European Parliament funds, prosecutors said.

PRESIDENTIAL BID?

"She ​signed the contracts. She cannot claim that she didn't know," Thierry Ramonatxo, advocate general at the Paris ‌prosecutor's office told the appeals court, speaking of Le Pen. "She was the one who set the rules internally."

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Le Pen told the appeals court that she had no sense of having done anything wrong.

However, contrary to the initial ruling, prosecutors did not request on Tuesday that any sentence be enforced immediately, ahead of any further appeals.

Were the court to follow the prosecutors' recommendations and Le Pen takes her appeal to France's highest court, the ⁠Cour de Cassation, she could decide to run in the ​presidential election.

The Cour de Cassation has said it would try to ​rule on any appeal before the election. Such a ruling could pose a political risk for Le Pen and her party if she is handed a final guilty verdict close ‍to the vote, which is ⁠due in April or May.

BARDELLA OPTION

Le Pen has run three times for president.

If she does not run next year, party president Jordan Bardella looks set to become the RN's candidate.

Bardella, 30, has helped ⁠expand the RN's appeal among younger voters though some analysts question whether he has the experience to win over the broader electorate ‌the RN needs to secure victory in 2027.

(Reporting by Elissa Darwish; additional reporting by Dominique ‌Vidalon; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

French prosecutors seek public office ban for Le Pen but leave door open to presidential bid

By Elissa Darwish and Ingrid Melander PARIS, Feb 3 (Reuters) - French prosecutors on Tuesday requested a five-...
New Mexico warns against consuming raw milk after newborn dies from listeria

Health officials in New Mexico are warning against consuming raw dairy products after a newborn baby in the state died from a listeria infection that they say was likely contracted when the baby's mother drank raw milk during pregnancy.

The New Mexico Department of Health in a news release said that officials believe the mother consumed unpasteurized milk while pregnant, which could have led to the listeria infection.

Officials cannot pinpoint the exact source of the listeria that led to the baby's death, the release said, but it noted that "the tragic death underscores the serious risks raw dairy poses to pregnant women, young children, elderly New Mexicans and anyone with a weakened immune system."

Dr. Chad Smelser, deputy state epidemiologist for the New Mexican Department of Health, said in the release that pregnant women should always only consume pasteurized milk in order to "prevent illnesses and deaths in newborns." Pasteurization is a process in which raw milk is heated to kill germs.

Listeria is one of many disease-causing germs that can appear in milk that has not been pasteurized. The bacteria in unpasteurized milk can cause miscarriage, stillbirth, preterm birth or fatal infection in newborns, and can cause serious infections and death in those with compromised immune systems, according to the health department.

People who drink raw milk can be exposed to pathogens including bird flu, brucella, tuberculosis, salmonella, campylobacter, cryptosporidium and E. coli, the health department release said.

Federal health officials havelong warnedagainst drinking raw milk because of the health risks, and sales of raw milk across state lines have been banned since 1987.

But raw milk has surged in popularity in recent years. Before joining the second Trump administration, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had proclaimedhimself to be a fan of the unpasteurized dairy choice.

Since becoming health secretary, however, Kennedy has largely steered clear of the issue, despite apush by raw milk advocatesto change federal policy on raw milk.

The Trump administration'snew campaignto promote drinking whole milk does not mention raw milk. But some raw milk advocates havestill been encouragedby the move and other developments from Washington.

In September, the administration's"Make America Healthy Again" reportoffered new health guidelines at Kennedy's helm, and it included plans to remove barriers for small-dairy farmers selling their own milk. At the time, Nestle described it as a "big win" for companies selling whole or raw milk products.

New Mexico warns against consuming raw milk after newborn dies from listeria

Health officials in New Mexico are warning against consuming raw dairy products after a newborn baby in the state died fr...

 

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