By ANDREW DAMPF
AP Sports Writer
SOELDEN, Austria(AP) — Lindsey Vonn hasn’t missed a beat in her
risky switch of ski manufacturers entering an Olympic year. Ted
Ligety, meanwhile, has picked up right where he left off before
injuring his right knee at the end of last season.
Vonn finished a respectable ninth in her worst event – giant
slalom – to open the World Cup season Saturday and Ligety placed
second in the men’s GS on Sunday behind Swiss veteran Didier
Cuche.
Vonn, the two-time defending overall World Cup champion,
switched from Rossignol to Head in the offseason when the
financially struggling French company asked its athletes to
accept 50 percent cuts in their endorsement deals.
“I definitely haven’t lost anything. The equipment is working
really well and if anything I think I’m skiing much better,”
said Vonn, who also placed ninth last year on the Rettenbach
glacier with her old equipment. “I definitely made some progress
in GS. You may not have seen it today, but I’m training well and
I just need to get some more miles on the equipment.”
Ligety didn’t require surgery after injuring his knee at the
U.S. championships in March, but he was in a full leg brace for
six weeks before beginning rehab.
“This spring was definitely the most boring spring I’ve ever had
in a while,” he said. "Usually that’s the time I’m out powder
skiing and biking and other sports, so it was tough to sit on
the couch and watch everyone else train and have fun.
“But by July I was able to train a little harder – ski half as
hard as I wanted to – and then by Chile (September training
camp) I was 100 percent and these last two weeks I’ve been
pushing it all out.”
Finishing second to the defending World Cup giant slalom
champion in his first race back put the finishing touch on the
return.
“I wasn’t expecting that because he just came from injury,” U.S.
head coach Sasha Rearick said. “He had been skiing very well
technically, but to throw himself down that hill and take the
chances, that shows the extreme competitor in Ted. That was a
fantastic performance.”
Ligety lost 0.6 of a second to Cuche in the flat finishing
section on both runs. Cuche, unlike Ligety, also excels in the
speed events of downhill and super-G and is more adept at skiing
the flats.
“That’s a big difference to make up in a race,” Ligety said.
“He’s a downhill skier, so you definitely see his strength down
there in the straighter, faster section. That’s something I need
to work on.”
Bode Miller, who skipped the Soelden race after taking a
seven-month hiatus from the sport, plans to make the World Cup
stop in Levi, Finland, on Nov. 14-15 his first race back with
the U.S. Ski Team after two years of skiing independently.
Another U.S. star, 2006 Olympic giant slalom champion Julia
Mancuso, is working hard to bounce back from hip and back
problems that hindered her last winter. She finished 21st in the
first run on Saturday and then skied off course in her second
trip down.
Mancuso stuck with Rossignol despite the manufacturer’s
difficulties and indicated she’s still dialing in her equipment.
“We’re figuring things out. It’s going to take a little bit but
hopefully I’m ready by Aspen,” she said, looking ahead to the
races in Colorado on Thanksgiving weekend.
Vonn already appears to be in good form for her goal of winning
a gold medal at the Vancouver Olympics in February. Even so, she
is keeping her expectations realistic, especially in giant
slalom, where her best career result was fourth in Aspen last
season.
“In GS, all that’s important is that I get to the finish, get
some points, and I stay ahead of the right people,” said Vonn,
who excels at downhill, super-G and occasionally slalom.
Vonn’s husband, Thomas, skied giant slalom at the 2002 Salt Lake
City Olympics and had nothing to criticize about his wife’s
performance.
“It was pretty safe skiing. I think she wanted to get the first
race under the belt, all the new gear and everything,” he said.
“I think she did that quite well, but she definitely had more in
the tank.”
Vonn is heading to Vail for 10 days of training before the World
Cup circuit resumes in Finland with men’s and women’s slaloms.












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