Ted Ligety was looking to add more hardware to his collection this season. Just not this kind of hardware.
The two-time Olympic gold medalist had four metal screws inserted into his left wrist as a result of a skiing mishap in a training session on Nov 22.
Now, he's showing his mettle by racing in the World Cup downhill, super-G and giant slalom races this weekend in Beaver Creek, Colorado. That's the current plan, anyway, despite a wrist that's still so tender he can barely push out of the start gate.
"That's my job, to be out there skiing, no matter what," said the 30-year-old from Park City, Utah, who finished 3.73 seconds behind the top time of Norway's Kjetil Jansrud in a downhill training session Tuesday. "I wouldn't miss this for the world.
"If I can do this relatively safe, then I'm going to be out there to push it."
Ligety has had his fair share of broken wrists throughout his career. But this one topped the list as far as pain. He was practicing in Vail, Colorado, when he essentially hooked his hand on a gate, breaking bones in his wrist and tearing ligaments.
It was straight to surgery.
"Just easier and faster to pin it all together, recovery-wise," he said.