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The pathway to help and safety for injured skiers like Lindsey Vonn is often through the air

Sport

The pathway to help and safety for injured skiers like Lindsey Vonn is often through the air
Sport

Sport

The pathway to help and safety for injured skiers like Lindsey Vonn is often through the air

2026-02-10 23:23 Last Updated At:23:30

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — The whirling of helicopter rotors might be the most feared sound in ski racing.

Skiers wearing little more than lightly padded body suits and helmets hurtling down icy snow at up to 80 mph (130 kph) is scary enough. Crashing into safety nets or tumbling out of control is worse.

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United States' Lindsey Vonn is helicoptered off after crashing, during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

United States' Lindsey Vonn is helicoptered off after crashing, during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

United States' Lindsey Vonn is helicoptered off after crashing, during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Trovati)

United States' Lindsey Vonn is helicoptered off after crashing, during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Trovati)

Rescue personnel is lowered from a helicopter to airlift United States' Lindsey Vonn after her crash during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Rescue personnel is lowered from a helicopter to airlift United States' Lindsey Vonn after her crash during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

A rescue helicopter flies past ahead of an alpine ski men's downhill portion of a team combined race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Bormio, Italy, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A rescue helicopter flies past ahead of an alpine ski men's downhill portion of a team combined race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Bormio, Italy, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A rescue helicopter arrives after United States' Lindsey Vonn crashed during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

A rescue helicopter arrives after United States' Lindsey Vonn crashed during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Watching them being airlifted off the course — virtually mummified in a stretcher, dangling in mid-air below a hovering chopper by a cable before being whisked away over jagged peaks toward the nearest hospital — is one of the gravest moments in sports.

Lindsey Vonn knows the sound all too well. When the American was airlifted off the Olympia delle Tofana course after a frightening head-over-heels fall during the Olympic downhill on Sunday, it led to her second such helicopter trip in nine days. The first crash, in a World Cup race in Switzerland, ruptured the ACL in her left knee; the second one broke that same leg, led to immediate surgery and possibly ended her career.

“The helicopters add an element of drama to it that is a bit heightened,” Anouk Patty, the chief of sport for U.S. Ski and Snowboard, said shortly after Vonn’s latest evacuation. “But the reality is it’s just the quickest way to get the athletes out to the clinic or the hospital where they need to go.”

Helicopter rescues in Alpine ski racing require close collaboration between local medical staff, team physicians and pilots.

Before the Olympics, The Associated Press interviewed Nicola Cherubin, the rescue specialist who was lowered from the helicopter and brought Vonn up to the aircraft with him on a rope and stayed alongside her while both were hanging outside the cabin during flight.

Privacy rules prevent Cherubin from discussing details of specific rescues, but he confirmed to The AP after Sunday’s crash that he directed the Vonn operation in Cortina.

International Ski and Snowboard Federation rules require that “a rescue helicopter or medically equivalent evacuation method must be available on a basis consistent with local law” at all World Cup, world championship and Olympic downhill and super-G races.

And while the rule doesn’t specify it, it actually means that at least two helicopters are required. Because if one chopper is called into action and then has to fly away to a hospital, there needs to be a backup in place.

About an hour before the start of every race, helicopters fly into position. Wind, fog and other weather conditions can ground helicopters, which can mean that races are canceled or postponed.

Helicopter evacuations are often considered more efficient than escorting injured athletes down icy and steep courses on sleds or toboggans, though sleds are still used in certain situations.

“It saves lives,” FIS president Johan Eliasch said.

When Italian skier Matteo Franzoso died following a crash in preseason training on a course with limited safety fences in Chile in September, a helicopter had to be called in to take him away. The delayed response led to calls for improved safety protocols.

The helicopter crew consists of the pilot, emergency care physicians and a rescue specialist like Cherubin.

“I go down and handle the security on the ground,” Cherubin said. “Then we communicate based on various codes: 01 or 2 means that just I go down and take the athlete up. Then if it’s a Code 3, which means it’s more serious, the doctor comes down, too.”

Injured athletes are first treated by a ground crew of medical personnel based at intervals along the course in coordination with team physicians from the national teams involved in the race.

Once an injured athlete has been hooked up to the rope, Cherubin tells the crew via radio when to start reeling the rope up to the helicopter, usually bringing the stretcher up alongside the cabin but remaining outside.

“When we have short flights of less than a minute, it doesn’t make sense to get inside,” Cherubin said. “It’s quicker just to stay outside and land that way.”

In Cortina, where the race finish is halfway up the mountain and not at the bottom, injured athletes are picked up off the course and flown down to a temporary medical station. Medical personnel from the injured athlete’s team can meet the skier there and help decide on the next course of action.

The options include using another, bigger helicopter to airlift the athlete to a hospital trauma unit, taking the athlete by ambulance to a medical facility in Cortina, or releasing the athlete.

In Bormio, where men’s skiing is being contested during the Olympics, Andrea Borromini, a physician and the chief of medical service for the Stelvio course, said they have three facilities, depending on the severity. “For the most impacted, health-threatening condition we have the hospital in Sondalo dedicated to Olympic rescue,” Borromini said.

In Vonn's case, she was taken farther south, to a hospital in Treviso.

“We often hear on TV that it’s a very serious injury because the helicopter has come. But that’s not always true. It’s just an evacuation system,” said Andrea Apollonio, who is in charge of the medical services at the Cortina races.

Chemmy Alcott, a retired British downhiller turned BBC broadcaster, said she has no memory of being picked up by a helicopter when she suffered compound fractures of the tibia and fibula bones in her right leg during a crash at Lake Louise, Alberta, in 2010.

“Fortunately by that point, I’d been given some morphine. So I was starting to lose my head a little bit — to stop the screaming,” Alcott said. “I only remember it because I’ve seen it in the video.”

Alcott can still relate to the thought process, though, that skiers go through when they realize they’ve lost control.

“You get this crazy slow motion focus,” she said. “So you think about your organs. You think, ‘Right, how am I going to protect my neck, my back?’ You’re going, ‘OK, this is how I’m going to fall.’ And then you have a huge amount of adrenaline, so you never feel pain in the first like 30 seconds. And then it hits you and you’re doing your kind of body scan from top to bottom, and that’s when you know things are bad.”

The emergency care physicians in the helicopter crew know that dealing with athletes immediately after they are injured is nothing like what they deal with in their day jobs.

“They always want to get up right away. So we have to immobilize them and then re-examine them,” said Lydia Rauch, an anesthesiologist who has been in the helicopter crew for years at races in Val Gardena and Cortina. “I’ve treated athletes with severely broken bones who told me that nothing was hurting them. And there could also be other internal injuries that you can’t notice right away.”

The sound of the helicopter blades can be disturbing to the next skier waiting to start and already dealing with a long delay due to the crash.

Austrian racer Mirjam Puchner was the unfortunate skier in that position for Vonn’s crash on Sunday. Since Vonn fell just a few gates into her run, the helicopter was virtually at eye level for Puchner.

“All that time you’re hearing that, it’s playing on your nerves,” said Puchner, who was disappointed with her 11th-place finish.

She said she has no memory of her own helicopter evacuation when she broke her right leg in a fall during downhill training at the 2017 world championships in St. Moritz, Switzerland.

“I woke up in the hospital,” she said.

AP Sports Writer Pat Graham in Bormio contributed.

AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

United States' Lindsey Vonn is helicoptered off after crashing, during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

United States' Lindsey Vonn is helicoptered off after crashing, during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

United States' Lindsey Vonn is helicoptered off after crashing, during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Trovati)

United States' Lindsey Vonn is helicoptered off after crashing, during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Marco Trovati)

Rescue personnel is lowered from a helicopter to airlift United States' Lindsey Vonn after her crash during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Rescue personnel is lowered from a helicopter to airlift United States' Lindsey Vonn after her crash during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

A rescue helicopter flies past ahead of an alpine ski men's downhill portion of a team combined race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Bormio, Italy, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A rescue helicopter flies past ahead of an alpine ski men's downhill portion of a team combined race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Bormio, Italy, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A rescue helicopter arrives after United States' Lindsey Vonn crashed during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

A rescue helicopter arrives after United States' Lindsey Vonn crashed during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Luka Doncic is almost certainly going to win the NBA scoring title this season. And it's now very possible that he doesn't make the All-NBA team.

That's rare, but it might be this season's reality.

The roster of award-caliber players who won't be winning awards this season continues to grow, with Doncic — the Los Angeles Lakers standout guard and MVP candidate — now out with a Grade 2 left hamstring strain that will force him to miss the rest of the regular season. Minnesota guard Anthony Edwards is certain to miss the league's 65-game award eligibility threshold as well after he was held out Thursday because of illness.

Doncic has played 64 games, one shy of the threshold. It's worth noting that BetMGM Sportsbook, among others, took Doncic off the list of MVP betting options following his injury Thursday.

“At this juncture of the season, it’s the last thing you want to see,” Lakers star LeBron James told reporters in Oklahoma City after Thursday's game, long before an MRI was performed Friday to determine the extent of Doncic's injury. “Especially anybody on our team, but when you have an MVP candidate on your team, the last thing you want to see is somebody go down with a hamstring injury."

Edwards can now only reach a maximum of 64 games as well, so he won’t be on the ballot for most major NBA awards either.

It was collectively bargained — meaning the league and the players association agreed on the terms — and this is the third season of it being part of the NBA rules.

It applies to player eligibility for five awards — MVP, Defensive Player of the Year, Most Improved Player, the All-NBA Team and the All-Defensive Team. Players have to either play in 65 regular-season games (with some minutes-played minimums in there as well), or at least 62 games before suffering a “season-ending injury."

But even with Doncic's hamstring hurt badly enough that he'll miss the rest of the regular season, it wouldn't be classified as “season-ending” unless a doctor — jointly selected by the NBA and the National Basketball Players Association — says he wouldn't be able to play again through May 31.

There is a grievance process and even a way to challenge the rule citing extraordinary circumstances, but neither would be easily utilized.

Five of the league's six highest-paid players this season — Golden State's Stephen Curry and Jimmy Butler, Philadelphia's Joel Embiid, Milwaukee's Giannis Antetokounmpo and Boston's Jayson Tatum — aren't eligible for awards. Denver's Nikola Jokic is the exception on the highest-paid list, and he'd likely be ineligible if he misses more than one more game down the stretch.

There were 23 players on the list of those winning MVP, MIP, DPOY, All-NBA and All-Defense last season. Of those, at least 10 are out of the running for honors this season: Antetokounmpo, Curry, Edwards, James, Tatum, Detroit's Cade Cunningham, Indiana teammates Tyrese Haliburton and Ivica Zubac, Utah's Jaren Jackson Jr. and Oklahoma City's Jalen Williams. (Most of those 10 have been out of the awards mix because of injuries for some time; Tatum and Haliburton both tore Achilles in last season's playoffs and it was obvious then that they wouldn't hit 65-game marks this year.)

Another four award winners from a year ago — Jokic, Oklahoma City's Lu Dort, Golden State's Draymond Green and Cleveland's Evan Mobley — aren't at 65 games yet this season but, for now anyway, seem on pace to get there.

Never say never. The union wants changes to the policy, and it's certain to come up in their conversations with the league office. But many players — and even Andre Iguodala, now the head of the players' association — have said in recent years that the 65-game rule is a good thing.

The league doesn't seem inclined to make a change based solely on what would appear to be an extraordinary number of award candidates not hitting the threshold in one year.

“I think it is working,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said last month. “I think if you look at the numbers, the pre-implementation of this rule, numbers were going in the wrong direction. I may have this a little bit off: I think the three years before we adopted this rule, almost a third of the All-NBA players had not played 80% of the games. That was a huge issue for the league.”

As we said, it's rare, but it has happened. Twice, to be exact.

— 1968-69: Elvin Hayes won the scoring title as a rookie, then wasn't even All-NBA — and didn't win Rookie of the Year, either.

— 1975-76: Bob McAdoo won his third consecutive scoring title and was second in the MVP race — but didn't make All-NBA. Players voted for MVP in those days, and McAdoo was an extremely close second behind Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Dave Cowens was third in the MVP vote but got the second-team All-NBA nod at center, with Abdul-Jabbar the first-team pick.

Doncic now seems likely to join that list. It's not mathematically certain yet that he wins the scoring title, but it would take something extraordinary for it not to happen.

He's averaging 33.5 points per game, with Gilgeous-Alexander at 31.6 per game. For Gilgeous-Alexander — last season's scoring champion — to overtake Doncic, he would need to go on an unbelievable run. An example: He'd need to score 292 points over the final five games to take over the top spot, and nobody other than Wilt Chamberlain has had a five-game run like that.

Of the previous 79 scoring champions, 64 were first-team All-NBA and 13 were second-team.

Jokic is going to win the league's rebounding and assist titles, while averaging a triple-double yet again. But he's also not assured yet of being on the award ballots.

The thresholds are different.

While the award mandate is 65 games in most cases, players are eligible for most statistical awards if they play in 58 games (or 70% of the season). There are different standards for some stat awards, such as field-goal percentage (minimum 300 made), free-throw percentage (minimum 125 made) and 3-point percentage (minimum 82 made).

A player can win a stat award while appearing in less than 58 games.

For example, last season, San Antonio's Victor Wembanyama played only 46 games but still won the blocked shot title. Even if he played in the minimum 58 games and recorded no blocks in the 12 games needed to reach that number he still would have been ahead of the runner-up, Utah's Walker Kessler.

AP NBA: https://www.apnews.com/hub/NBA

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) looks to make a shot-attempt in the fourth quarter of a loss to the Detroit Pistons in an NBA basketball game Monday, March 23, 2026, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Duane Burleson)

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) looks to make a shot-attempt in the fourth quarter of a loss to the Detroit Pistons in an NBA basketball game Monday, March 23, 2026, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Duane Burleson)

Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic warms up before an NBA basketball game against the Utah Jazz, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Rob Gray)

Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic warms up before an NBA basketball game against the Utah Jazz, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Rob Gray)

Detroit Pistons forward Ronald Holland II (5) talks with guard Cade Cunningham (2), who did not play due to an injury, during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Toronto Raptors Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Duane Burleson)

Detroit Pistons forward Ronald Holland II (5) talks with guard Cade Cunningham (2), who did not play due to an injury, during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Toronto Raptors Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Duane Burleson)

Los Angeles Lakers forward/guard Luka Dončić (77) drives against Oklahoma City Thunder guard Cason Wallace (22) during the first half of an NBA basketball game Thursday, April. 2, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Gerald Leong)

Los Angeles Lakers forward/guard Luka Dončić (77) drives against Oklahoma City Thunder guard Cason Wallace (22) during the first half of an NBA basketball game Thursday, April. 2, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Gerald Leong)

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