Judging by the numbers, at 5 feet 10 inches and 160 pounds, Vonn is far from small in the ski racing world. But the cry of “heavy’’ - as in too heavy - would have to come from someone who has never seen Lindsey Vonn.
And yet the assertion came from Austrian women’s Alpine coach Herbert Mandl, who sees the American superstar on a regular basis, that Vonn’s weight helps her in the downhill events, and who emphasized the “giant duel’’ this season between Vonn and her German rival, 5-10, 168-pound Maria Riesch, for World Cup supremacy. This was among other remarks aimed at Vonn’s size.
Mandl’s outburst might have betrayed a bit of frustration after he watched Vonn blow away the field of European skiers in two straight downhills last weekend at Haus im Ennstal, Austria.
Judging from what happened the next day, he probably picked the wrong time to level his weight remarks about Vonn.
“I use things like that to push myself,’’ said Vonn, “so I went out and swept three races.’’
Exactly. The day after her second downhill win, Vonn took to the starting gate again and did what no other US ski racer has ever done, winning her third race in a row. A World Cup three-peat at a single event, and a feat not seen since German ace Katja Seizinger did it in 1997.
Vonn, 25, said the Euro version of locker room trash talk was probably heightened by local journalists, but that her frustration with what Mandl said was extra motivation for her to ski faster in the super-G Sunday.
“The Austrian coaches actually apologized to me,’’ said Vonn, whose weekend propelled her past Phil Mahre as the second-winningest US skier with 28 World Cup victories. Only Bode Miller has more with 31.
“As a woman, I would like to drop the subject of weight,’’ Vonn said with a chuckle, “but I pride myself on my work ethic, how hard I work at the gym. I give everything for my sport and work incredibly hard.