CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy — Lindsey Vonn was over the limit. Beyond it, really. Because of course she was.
There is only one speed for maybe the fiercest competitor to ever snap into a pair of skis and point them down the side of a mountain: as fast as she possibly can, for as long as she possibly can, as relentlessly as she possibly can.
For many days during Vonn's nearly 25 years in the spotlight, that kind of relentlessness leads to glory.
Other times, like a sun-splashed Sunday in a place that's long felt like a second home, at an event that has long served as her own personal stage, it ends in agony. This time, with a broken left leg.
Three gates into the women's Olympic downhill in Cortina, the 41-year-old American and her surgically repaired and titanium-reinforced right knee and her waiting-to-be-surgically-repaired left knee were already in full-send territory.
If anything, Vonn was almost too perfect. Searching for every inch, every millisecond of an advantage, her right arm clipped the fourth gate. Her skis sailed out from under her. In a flash, the unlikely and stirring return that had captivated her sport was over. At least for now.
All that was left for the most decorated downhill racer — male or female — were tears, uncertainty and a helicopter lift to safety, a ride that included a sweeping turn above the grandstand at the finish, where the crowd that came to watch history instead let out an ovation neither side hopes doubled as a goodbye.
''Tragic,'' International Ski and Snowboard president Johan Eliasch said moments later. ''But it's ski racing, right?"