Mistake costs Lindsey Vonn gold in World Cup downhill

Sofia Goggia of Italy won a World Cup downhill on home snow on Friday in Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy after Lindsey Vonn made a major mistake.

American skier winds up in 2nd after bumpy landing

Lindsey Vonn, seen above at a previous event, lost her lead and nearly crashed along the way to a second-place finish in the World Cup women's downhill race in Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy, on Friday. (Christian Bruna/EPA)

Sofia Goggia of Italy won a World Cup downhill on home snow on Friday in Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy after Lindsey Vonn made a major mistake.

Vonn was faster than Goggia midway down the Olympia delle Tofane course but had trouble landing a jump and slammed on the brakes to clear the next gate.

"The hill was really good today but obviously the light was not great," Vonn said of the overcast conditions. "One little bump caught my ski and I almost crashed."

Goggia finished with a time of one minute 36.45 seconds, 0.47 seconds ahead of Vonn in second.

"After my ski performance I was not happy, but it lasted and Lindsey made that mistake," Goggia said. "If that doesn't happen she probably wins with a big advantage."

It was the fourth victory of Goggia's career and second straight after also winning a downhill in Bad Kleinkirchheim, Austria, last weekend.

Overall World Cup leader Mikaela Shiffrin finished third, 0.84 behind, in her first attempt at the Cortina downhill.

Toronto's Candace Crawford was 38th.

Shiffrin holds a massive 871-point lead ahead of Goggia in the overall standings, while Goggia leads Shiffrin by 49 points in the downhill rankings.

Julia Mancuso, another American standout, announced her retirement and bid the circuit goodbye by wearing a Wonder Woman suit during a casual run.

Slowed by worsening hip problems in recent seasons, Mancuso failed to qualify for next month's Pyeongchang Olympics.

Mancuso will be remembered for her record at big events, having won four medals at Olympics and five at world championships, despite having a small frame for a ski racer.

"In ski racing, for me it was always about having fun," Mancuso said. "And when I had fun success followed. ... I hope my career can inspire others to just have fun, especially as an underdog."

In the finish area, teammates sprayed Mancuso with champagne.

Friday's race was originally scheduled for Val d'Isere last month but was moved from the French resort because of poor conditions.

CBCSports.ca will have live coverage of the women's downhill event beginning on Saturday at 4 a.m. ET., as well as the super-G race on Sunday at 5:45 a.m. ET.