Injured Canadian skier Marie-Michele Gagnon focuses on next Olympics
Marie-Michele Gagnon has already wrapped her head around the fact she will miss the Winter Olympics in South Korea.
In fact, though she is just getting into rehab from knee and shoulder surgery, the Canadian alpine skier sounds upbeat and looking ahead at her long-term future rather than dwelling on the current setback.
The 28-year-old from Lac Etchemin, Que. tore the anterior cruciate ligament in her right knee and dislocated her left shoulder in a Nov. 30 crash during training for the women’s World Cup downhill in Lake Louise.
“I’ve definitely had some time to ponder it,” she said during a conference call on Wednesday. “For sure it’s disappointing to be hurt at any time, for sure in an Olympic year even more disappointing.
“I would say we are lucky that our sport, alpine skiing, it’s not just about the Olympics. It’s a sport that has been ingrained in the culture in Europe for many, many years. I would say all the World Cups are very, very important and overall World Cup titles and everything, those are still dreams I have.
“For this time, I have to give up my Olympic dream for this cycle but I have four more years after that and I want to make it to the next Olympics, so it’s not over as far as the Olympics goes for me.”
Her season is done, however, and it held some real promise. She finished 10th in a slalom in Levi, Finland and 24th in a giant slalom in Killington, Vermont. And she was putting down a top-five training run when she caught an edge and wound up in the safety net.
She popped her own shoulder back into place following the crash — she has injured it several times — and following an initial exam by doctors, she didn’t think the knee injury was too severe. A subsequent MRI in Calgary revealed the complete tear. Because she would need surgery to repair the knee, she also decided to have surgery on the shoulder at the same time rather than wait until the spring.
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