Ukraine's Zelenskiy says dignified, lasting peace realistic, ahead of talks

KYIV, Feb 2 (Reuters) - President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on ​Monday that it was ‌realistic to achieve a dignified and ‌lasting peace, ahead of the next round of peace talks with Russian and U.S. ⁠officials due ‌this week in Abu Dhabi.

Speaking after discussions ‍with his negotiating team, Zelenskiy said the Ukrainian delegation would also ​hold bilateral meetings with ‌U.S. officials during the two days of talks in Abu Dhabi, which are due to start on Wednesday.

"We consider ⁠the bilateral security ​guarantees document with ​the United States to be complete, and we ‍anticipate further ⁠substantive work on documents related to recovery and economic ⁠development," Zelenskiy said.

(Reporting by Anna ‌Pruchnicka, Olena Harmash; Editing ‌by Daniel Flynn)

Ukraine's Zelenskiy says dignified, lasting peace realistic, ahead of talks

KYIV, Feb 2 (Reuters) - President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on ​Monday that it was ‌realistic to achieve a dignified and ‌...
Tragedy off America's oldest seaport claims 7 lives as fishing boat sinks in frigid waters

BOSTON (AP) — The seven victims of a marine tragedy that has devastated a storied Massachusetts fishing town included a fifth-generation fisherman, a young fisheries observer and a father-and-son crew duo who all died when their fishing boat, the Lily Jean, sank off America's oldest seaport of Gloucester.

The vessel's sinking is the latest maritime tragedy to befall Gloucester and its close-knit community of people in the fishing business. The perils and exploits of a fishing industry that inspired the book and movie "The Perfect Storm" is tied to 400 years of history and, at times, tragedy.

U.S. Coast Guard officials said Monday they have identified all seven victims who died when a commercial fishing boat sank without a mayday call in the frigid Atlantic waters. They have since launched an investigation.

Accursio "Gus" Sanfilippo was the captain of the boat, and the crew consisted of Paul Beal Sr., Paul Beal Jr., John Rousanidis, Freeman Short and Sean Therrien, the Coast Guard said in identifying the victims for the first time Monday. Also aboard was Jada Samitt, a federal fisheries observer for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Coast Guard and NOAA said. No one survived.

Sanfilippo was well known in the community. The Lily Jean, Sanfilippo, and his crew were featured in a 2012 episode of the History Channel show "Nor'Easter Men." The captain is described as a fifth-generation commercial fisherman, fishing out of Gloucester, in the Georges Bank. The crew is shown working in dangerous weather conditions for hours on end, spending as many as 10 days at sea on one trip for haddock, lobster and flounder.

"We loved each other," Vito Giacalone, head of the Gloucester Fishing Community Preservation Fund, said about his relationship with Sanfilippo. "He treated me like a big brother and I treated him like my younger brother. To know the tragedy of this and to know the kind of character that Gus had, he'd be mortified to know that these lives were all lost."

Tragedy befalls fishing town

Paul Lundberg, Gloucester's mayor, said the names of those on the Lily Jean would be added to a city memorial honoring thousands of fishermen who have been lost at sea across the years.

Everett Sawyer, 55, a childhood friend of Sanfilippo's, said he has known 25 people who were lost at sea. Cold winter conditions can complicate operations even for experienced sailors, Sawyer said.

"Things happen very quickly when you're out on the ocean," he said.

NOAA said in a statement that Samitt was a fishery observer who was assigned to collect data from the vessel's catch. Fisheryobserversare workers on board fishing boats who gather data used by the government to craft regulations.

Samitt's family said in a statement that Samitt was a 22-year-old observer who was originally from Virginia and had a deep love of Gloucester's fishing community.

"Jada was on the Lily Jean that day because of her strong belief in her work, not only as an observer, but as someone who knew her important role as a crew member. She proved herself to be so on every trip, and conveyed to us how critical it was to protect the seas and fisheries," the statement said.

NOAA Fisheries said observer deployments would be suspended until after midnight Wednesday due to the sinking and the weather in the Northeast.

"Our thoughts and deepest sympathies are with Jada's family, the families of the six fishermen, the NOAA observer community, and everyone affected. We are deeply appreciative of the efforts made by the U.S. Coast Guard and the other fishing vessels that assisted in the search," NOAA said in its statement.

Search for survivors yielded no results

The Coast Guard on Saturday suspended its search for those aboard the Lily Jean. Authorities had launched a search and rescue mission early Friday after receiving an alert from the 72-foot (22-meter) vessel about 25 miles (40 kilometers) off the historic Cape Ann peninsula.

An investigation will hopefully yield more, the Coast Guard said Monday.

"A district-level formal investigation consists of a Coast Guard investigating officer who will receive evidence and testimony using formal rules and procedures regarding a recent marine accident," the Coast Guard said in a statement. "This type of investigation is launched for incidents of significant regional importance or those that may reveal broader issues with a class of vessel or areas of technical concern. "

Searchers found a debris field near where the alert originated, along with a body in the water and an empty life raft, the Coast Guard has said.

Crews covered about 1,000 square miles (2,590 square kilometers) using aircraft, cutters and small boats over a 24-hour period. However, after consultation between search and rescue mission coordinators and on-scene commanders, the Coast Guard announced Saturday that it had determined that all reasonable search efforts for the missing crew members had been exhausted.

Officials said there was no mayday call from the Lily Jean as it navigated the frigid Atlantic Ocean on its way home to Gloucester. The Coast Guard was notified by a beacon from the boat that alerts when it hits the water.

Fishing is a dangerous business

Deep-sea fishing in New England can always be hazardous, but it can be especially dangerous in the winter because of high waves, frigid temperatures and unpredictable weather. Commercial fishing is often cited as one of the most dangerous jobs in the world.

The Coast Guard's Sector Boston commander, Jamie Frederick, has said icy temperatures and stormy conditions made finding survivors at night difficult, a task made more challenging bya nor'easterapproaching the East Coast over the weekend. Searchers dealt with 7- to 10-foot (2- to 3-meter) seas and freezing ocean spray, Frederick said. ___

Whittle reported from Scarborough, Maine.

Tragedy off America's oldest seaport claims 7 lives as fishing boat sinks in frigid waters

BOSTON (AP) — The seven victims of a marine tragedy that has devastated a storied Massachusetts fishing town included a f...
Drone incidents at UK military bases doubled last year

LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Britain's military bases experienced a doubling of drone incidents last year, highlighting the ​changing nature of warfare and prompting the government to ‌hand more powers to its forces to protect sites from aerial threats.

In ‌2025, there were 266 reported uncrewed aerial vehicle incidents near defence sites in Britain, up from 126 reported in 2024, part of a wider trend of European airspace being targeted by ⁠drones.

"The doubling of ‌rogue drones near military sites in the UK in the last year underlines the increasing and ‍changing nature of the threats we face," Defence minister John Healey said in a statement on Monday.

Drone incursions forced airports in Belgium ​and Denmark to close for hours at a time in ‌the last few months of 2025, with experts saying the incidents had the hallmarks of Russian interference, a charge denied by Moscow.

In order to counter the threat from drones to British bases, Healey said military officers would be given ⁠new powers to destroy drones operating ​near them, an action that previously ​required the involvement of the police.

The new powers will also mean the military can destroy land drones ‍and unmanned ⁠vehicles operating under water.

Healey said security at military sites had been stepped up. Last June, pro-Palestinian activists broke into ⁠a Royal Air Force base, damaging and spraying red paint over ‌two planes used for refuelling and transport.

(Reporting by Sarah ‌Young, editing by Paul Sandle)

Drone incidents at UK military bases doubled last year

LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Britain's military bases experienced a doubling of drone incidents last year, highlighting ...
Missing Indiana teen Hailey Buzbee is dead, police say

Hailey Buzbee, an Indiana teen who's been missing for almost a month, is dead, police announced during a news conference the evening of Feb. 1, though the investigation is still active and Buzbee has not yet been found.

Buzbee's parents last saw their daughter, a 17-year-old student at Hamilton Southeastern High School in Fishers, at 10 p.m. Jan. 5. The Fishers Police Department said Feb. 1 she'd allegedly been picked up by Tyler Thomas, an Ohio man she'd met through online gaming.

Police said they talked to Thomas within a few days of her disappearance, who had told them he'd dropped Buzbee off on the side of the road in western Ohio. Police soon determined that statement was not true and worked with law enforcement partners in Ohio to search Thomas' home and vehicle.

Tim O'Malley, special agent in charge of the FBI Indianapolis Field Office, (right) listens as Fishers police chief Ed Gebhart speaks during a press conference on Hailey Buzbee on Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026, in Fishers. Officials believe Buzbee, a 17-year-old Hamilton Southeastern High School student, left her home in the early hours of Jan. 6. Officials now believe Buzbee is dead.

Law enforcement determined Buzbee had been at Thomas' home in Columbus, Ohio, and a short-term rental in Hocking County, Ohio. Evidence collected, in addition to statements by Thomas, led investigators to the conclusion that Buzbee was dead.

Thomas is currently in custody in Ohio for charges associated with the case, police said, though he hasn't been charged with murder.

A 39-year-old man named Tyler Thomas was recently charged with pandering obscenity involving a minor and tampering with evidence in Franklin County, Ohio, Indiana officials said during the news conference. Investigators in that case found child sexual abuse material on Thomas' electronic devices, according to aColumbus news outlet.

Police believe Buzbee died within a few days after she was picked up.

It's believed that Hailey Buzbee, 17, left her home in the Enclave at Vermillion Neighborhood in the early hours of Jan. 6, 2026.

The announcement comes after weeks of searching from police and Buzbee's family. Though the teenager was initially classified as a runaway, policeupgraded her case to an "endangered missing juvenile" Jan. 20.

Beau Buzbee, Hailey's father, said his family was devastated by the news in a post on Facebook.

"Hailey was a smart, beautiful, kind, and caring young lady with a bright future," he wrote. "She had a deep love for her family and holds a very special place in so many hearts."

Contact breaking politics reporter Marissa Meador at mmeador@gannett.com or find her on X at @marissa_meador.

This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star:Missing Indiana teen Hailey Buzbee is dead, Fishers police say

Missing Indiana teen Hailey Buzbee is dead, police say

Hailey Buzbee, an Indiana teen who's been missing for almost a month, is dead, police announced during a news confere...
Iranian police detain four unspecified foreigners over unrest

DUBAI, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Iranian police have arrested four ​foreigners over last month's unrest, ‌Iranian state media reported on Monday, ‌without specifying their nationality.

Reuters

State media quoted Iranian police as saying the four foreigners had been ⁠arrested "in a ‌raid inside their hideout". Four homemade sound grenades ‍had been found in one of their bags.

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Thousands of Iranians are ​believed to have been killed ‌in a crackdown on anti-government protests last month. Iran's authorities blame foreign countries for fomenting the violence, the worst ⁠domestic unrest since ​the 1979 Islamic ​Revolution.

The authorities have been announcing daily arrests of suspected ‍protest ringleaders. ⁠The U.S.-based rights group HRANA said on Monday nearly ⁠50,000 people have so far been ‌arrested.

(Reporting by Dubai NewsroomEditing ‌by Peter Graff)

Iranian police detain four unspecified foreigners over unrest

DUBAI, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Iranian police have arrested four ​foreigners over last month's unrest, ‌Iranian state media...
5 college football hires I can't stop applauding, Lane Kiffin to Matt Campbell

When a school fires itscollege footballcoach, it aims to achieve two goals.

USA TODAY Sports

Change the vibes. Upgrade the coach.

This season brought usa coaching carouselunlike any that preceded it. The vibes in Happy Valley quickly soured after Penn State lost to Oregon, UCLA and Northwestern. Itfired James Franklinjust six games after he coached in a College Football Playoff semifinal.

If we thought that was wild, it got zanier.Lane Kiffin walked awayfrom a playoff-qualifying team to accept a job at a rival and reaffirm his renegade bona fides.

Toppmeyer:Bill Belichick, forget the NFL. You're made for college football

Big fish:College football's 10 biggest offseason moves, transfers to hires

Now that the carousel has stopped (for about eight months, anyway), I can't stop thinking about five hires, in particular.

I awarded each of these hires high marks, shortly after they happened. Upon further reflection, I'm doubling down and buying more stock in these hires.

Lane Kiffin, LSU

News media arrive before a press conference by LSU's new head coach Lane Kiffin at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. A sign is seen before a press conference by LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin is introduced at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin speaks at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin speaks at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025.

See Lane Kiffin's LSU introductory press conference in Baton Rouge

On Kiffin's way out of Mississippi,he trampledon theredemption storyhe'd spent years authoring in Oxford, and hesurrendered some of the goodwillhe'd earned. So what? LSU is just the type of program that can embrace being a supervillain.

Look, you can hate how Kiffin left Ole Miss, but there's no denying Kiffin left the Rebels much better than he found them. He's performing better than ever before, with 32 wins in the past three seasons, and now he's positioned at a job.

Unions with Kiffin rarely end neatly, but, in the meantime, this has a chance to be a beautiful partnership between a star coach who's on top of his game and a program thirsty for the limelight. To quote LSU athletic director Verge Ausberry, Kiffin is "a big enough personality to operate in a state full of big personalities."

Better yet, he's a portal maestro. Kiffin signed one of his most impressive transfer hauls ever, making it possible for LSU to go from mediocrity to playoff qualification in short order.

I've got but one question: How will Kiffin handle the pressure and scrutiny at a job that will demand national championships? He's done his best work while coaching Florida Atlantic and Ole Miss in an underdog role, removed from the brightest spotlight.

Eric Morris, Oklahoma State

The Air Raid worked well for Mike Leach at Texas Tech in the old Big 12.

Morris, a Leach disciple, found success with the Air Raid coaching North Texas in the American Conference.

So, will Morris' Air Raid offense thrive for Oklahoma State in the reconfigured Big 12? I don't see why it shouldn't.

Drew Mestemaker, a zero-star recruit,became a star quarterbackat North Texas. Hefollowed Morris to Oklahoma State, along with several other players from a 12-win North Texas team.

A Texas native who spent most of his career in the state, Morris should excel recruiting overlooked prospects from the Lone Star State. Some will even have experience in the Air Raid. The system is popular at Texas high schools, a sign of Leach's lasting influence.

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At the peak of Mike Gundy's career, he allowed the Cowboys to punch above their weight. Morris and his Air Raid allow for the same effect. Morris fits what OSU needs.

James Franklin, Virginia Tech

Franklin and Penn State were good together for so long, until he'd raised theNittany Lions' expectations to a level he couldn't meet. Twelve seasons with any coach is a long time. Twelve years with a coach of Franklin's personality is an eternity. When the wins stopped, it understandably became time for a breakup.

None of that means Franklin isn't right for Virginia Tech. He's a program builder. TheHokiesneed rebuilt. He brings experience recruiting the area known as the DMV — that's D.C., Maryland and Virginia — that's vital to Virginia Tech. He's a high-floor coach coming to a program that must elevate its foundation. Never mind Franklin's ceiling, because the Hokies haven't won more than seven games in any of the past five seasons.

Virginia Tech has never hired a coach with as good of a resume as Franklin carries.

After hiring Franklin, the Hokies signed their best-rated recruiting class since 2019. He seems determined to show Penn State it made a mistake. That's perfect for Virginia Tech.

Will Stein,Kentucky

Kentucky zigged where other SEC programs zagged. LSU, Florida, Auburn and Arkansas were set on hiring someone with head coaching experience. In contrast, Kentucky nabbed Oregon's hot-shot offensive coordinator, under whom three consecutive quarterbacks flourished: Bo Nix, Dillon Gabriel and Dante Moore.

Sure, it's risky hiring a rookie coach to a difficult SEC job. But, face it, guarantees don't exist for UK football. Take a chance. Roll the dice.

The way Mark Stoops liked to tell it, Kentucky operated from the NIL poorhouse. Hiring a native son like Stein, who says he grew up rooting for the 'Cats, seems just the way to provide a jolt to donors. Kentucky's top-10 transfer class suggests Stein had a few shekels to spend on a roster flip.

Kentucky fans should feel inspired the university didn't just kick the can down the road with Stoops, once it became obvious his best days were behind him.

Whatever Stoops' achievements, persistently paltry quarterback play placed a ceiling on his teams. With Stein, there's a chance that changes.

Matt Campbell, Penn State

When Penn State fired Franklin, a couple of reactions naturally emerged.

  • Response 1: It was probably time for a change.

  • Response 2: Does Penn State seriously think it can do better than a coach who won nearly 70% of his games there?

I subscribed to both beliefs — and then Penn State hired Campbell. Well, now, let's revisit this. Could Campbell win 70% of his games at Penn State? I think he can.

Campbell thrived at Toledo for five seasons. In 10 seasons at Iowa State, he became the best coach in program history. He made consistent winning look far easier than it had ever been in Ames, Iowa. Now, he's got more resources at his disposal. More pressure, too.

Campbell suits the Penn State brand, with a track record for stingy defenses.

Will he beat Ohio State more frequently than Franklin? That's debatable, although Franklin set a low bar by beating the Buckeyes just once.

If a school can thread the needle of a generating a vibes change while hiring a proven but still ascending coach, it's done well. Penn State achieved that.

Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him atBToppmeyer@gannett.comand follow him on X@btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College football hires worth applauding, Lane Kiffin to James Franklin

5 college football hires I can't stop applauding, Lane Kiffin to Matt Campbell

When a school fires itscollege footballcoach, it aims to achieve two goals. Change the vibes. Upgrade the coac...
Lindsey Vonn has 24 years of memories at Olympic host Cortina, many of them sentimental or historic

Her first career podium. The women's World Cup wins mark. A course-record 12 victories. The family reunions with her Italy-based sister. And a rare European race visit by her mother.

Associated Press FILE - United States' Lindsey Vonn prepares for an alpine ski, women's World Cup downhill training, in Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy, Thursday, Jan.18, 2018. (AP Photo/Gabriele Facciotti, File) FILE - Lindsey Vonn, then Kildow, from the United States, celebrates on the podium after placing third in the World Cup women's downhill race in Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Jan. 18, 2004. (AP Photo/Marco Trovati, File) FILE - United States' Lindsey Vonn, right, poses for photographs with her mother Linda Krohn, center, and her sister Laura Kildow, at the end of an alpine ski, women's World Cup downhill race, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Friday, Jan. 16, 2015. (AP Photo/Andrew Dampf, File) FILE - Lindsey Vonn, of the United States, speeds down the the 2.340-kilometer (1.45-mile) Olympia delle Tofane course on her way to take fifth place in a women's ski World Cup super-G event, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Jan. 20, 2008. (AP Photo/Marco Trovati, File) FILE - United States's Lindsey Vonn skis during an alpine ski, women's World Cup downhill training, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Friday, Jan. 27, 2017. (AP Photo/Alessandro Trovati, File)

Vonn's Place

Lindsey Vonnis attempting to recover froma left knee injuryin time to try and win an Olympic medal next weekend at age 41.

One of the biggest reasons she came back in the first place after nearly six years of retirement — and what's motivating her now — is that she wants to return to the town hosting women's races at theMilan Cortina Winter Games.

Vonn is the queen of Cortina d'Ampezzo, the resort known as "the Queen of the Dolomites." Her memories there go back nearly a quarter century.

"I don't think I would have tried this comeback if the Olympics weren't in Cortina," Vonn said before her injury. "If it had been anywhere else, I would probably say it's not worth it. But for me, there's something special about Cortina that always pulls me back and it's pulled me back one last time."

Vonn recently looked back at her career in Cortina during an interview with The Associated Press:

An unfinished debut nearly a quarter century ago

Vonn's first race in Cortina was back in January 2002, before some of her current competitors were even born.

Approaching what would be her first Olympics a month later at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, Vonn's debut in Cortina was a World Cup super-G and she didn't finish it.

"I was skiing pretty well at the time, but I wasn't really putting everything together," she said. "And I remember in Cortina being nervous about making the Olympic team. I don't think I skied badly. But I didn't finish, so at that point I definitely hadn't been able to put all the pieces together."

Demoted to skiing's minor leagues

Vonn's Cortina record doesn't have an entry for 2003.

"Oh, I got demoted," she said. "I was sent back to Europa Cup. They definitely put all their weight behind Julia (Mancuso)," referring to skiing's "minor leagues" circuit and her former teammate.

"At that point I hadn't 100% committed to speed. … I had been racing more tech races than I had speed, so I was still kind of not sure where I fit in and I was still super skinny at the time and I was just trying to figure everything out."

Vonn's demotion motivated her to hire a physical trainer and get into better shape.

A memorable video session with a trusted coach

Turns out, it didn't take Vonn very long "to figure everything out."

When she returned to Cortina in 2004, Vonn recorded the first World Cup podium result of her career.

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In the first of two downhills that weekend, Vonn finished fifth in what was her first time racing downhill on the Olympia delle Tofane course.

The next day, she finished third in a race won by then Olympic champion Carole Montillet. Lindsey Kildow, as she was still referred to, placed 0.24 seconds behind and only one hundredth behind second-place finisher Renate Goetschl.

"Cortina was really the turning point for me. It's really where I solidified my mental routine, my physical routine," Vonn said. "That was the first time I really felt confident enough in what I was doing that I belonged on the podium."

It was a video session with Alex Hoedlmoser — who has coached Vonn since she was 16 and still coaches her with the U.S. team now — after Vonn's fifth-place finish that made something click with her.

"He's like, 'See, that wasn't that hard, was it?' And I was like, 'No, I can do this.' And he's like, 'Yes, you can,'" Vonn said. "I remember it very vividly.

"And then when I did get on the podium, it was such a great feeling, and I remember calling my dad, and my grandparents, and my mom, and crying, and it was a really special moment, and really a turning point for me in my career, where I really believed that I could be amongst the best in the world."

A comfort zone she shares only with Lake Louise

Vonn didn't win her first race in Cortina until 2008. But ever since that 2004 podium, she has felt comfortable there.

"It's kind of like Lake Louise where I don't have to think too much about it," Vonn said, referring to the Canadian resort where she won 18 races. "I know where to go, I know what it takes, and it's a very special place for me and no matter how many wins or losses I've had there, that won't change."

A family reunion for a record-breaking weekend

WhileTiger Woods may have stolen the show, what Vonn likes to remember about when she broke Annemarie Moser-Pröll's 35-year-old World Cup wins record in 2015 with victory No. 63, in Cortina, is that she was surrounded by her family.

"I have a big family and they really haven't come to hardly any World Cups in my career, unfortunately," Vonn said. "That was a really special weekend. My dad and his wife and my mom and her husband, my sister Laura, were there. It was really special. I don't have many pictures or memories of my family being at World Cup races. We have the Olympics but even then it's not my whole family. So I really cherished that weekend."

Vonn's younger sister, Laura, lived in Florence then and the siblings met up annually in Cortina. Vonn's mother, Lindy, died in 2022 of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), otherwise known as Lou Gehrig's disease.

"It's nice," Vonn said of the 2015 race, "to be able to look back and remind myself of those memories."

Tears, pain and retirement in 2019. And now back again

It hasn't been just joy for Vonn in Cortina.

There were also tears whenshe struggled there in 2019, realizing that she would soon have to retire due to the pain in her knees and joints.

After getting a partial joint replacement in her right knee, Vonn returned to racing last season and now she's heading back to Cortina aiming to add some new entries to her career record there — if her left knee allows it.

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

Lindsey Vonn has 24 years of memories at Olympic host Cortina, many of them sentimental or historic

Her first career podium. The women's World Cup wins mark. A course-record 12 victories. The family reunions with her ...

 

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