Münchener Post - Italy ski star Brignone unsure of return as home Olympics near

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Italy ski star Brignone unsure of return as home Olympics near
Italy ski star Brignone unsure of return as home Olympics near / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP/File

Italy ski star Brignone unsure of return as home Olympics near

Italy's Federica Brignone said Saturday she still does not know when she will be able to next strap on her skis with less than four months to go before the start of the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics.

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Brignone is in a race against time to be ready for the sprawling 2026 Games from February 6-22 after suffering a double left leg break in the Italian championships in April.

That horror injury came a week after Brignone completed a career-defining season in which she won world championship gold in the giant slalom discipline and the overall World Cup title.

And the 35-year-old said she is yet to return to training ahead of the start of the new alpine skiing season which begins next weekend in Solden, Austria.

"Ever since I injured myself I haven't given myself any precise dates, because it's just too difficult to do so," said Brignone at a media event organised by Italy's winter sports federation near Milan.

"I'm getting better week after week and I'm putting in a lot of work, and that is positive. From tomorrow I'll be back at JMedical (medical centre of Italian football club Juventus in Turin), I'll be back there to do physiotherapy until I'm ready to put my skis on.

"It's really hard... since April I've thought about everything else apart from skis, the boots and all the ski equipment; it's not even really entered my head."

- 'Every day I feel pain' -

Brignone, who also won both the downhill and giant slalom categories in last season's World Cup, later said that she has no idea when she can return to competition.

"Honestly until I can put the skis on I just don't know," she told reporters.

"I'll talk about it with the team managers because we've got a really strong team, the girls all give it a good go and if they deserve a spot (in the Olympic team) more than me, that's all there is to it.

"I work between five to seven hours a day just to recover from the injury and that means I'm working really hard because otherwise I'd have one leg that's a completely different shape to the other.

"I'm not doing any actual training, I'm still doing physical therapy and every day I feel pain."

The women's alpine ski competition at the Winter Olympics will be held in Cortina d'Ampezzo from February 8-18.

J.Becker--MP