'I feel like myself again': Grenier returns to World Cup super-G 4 years after leg injury

Valérie Grenier returned to super-G and speed racing on Dec. 4, placing 31st at a World Cup stop in Lake Louise, Alta., nearly four years after the Canadian skier broke her right leg in four places in a training run and suffered a subsequent mental block.

Places 31st in 1st race in Lake Louise, Alta., since 2018

Canada's Valérie Grenier, pictured racing giant slalom last month in Killington, Vt., made her World Cup return in super-G earlier this month in Lake Louise, Alta., placing 31st. She abandoned the speed event and downhill in favour of GS after suffering a mental block upon her return to competition in late 2020. (Robert F. Bukaty/The Associated Press)

It's late morning during the pre-season grind for alpine skier Valérie Grenier, who enjoys sipping coffee following an extended sleep on her day off in Colorado. An afternoon of rest is planned after a walk and grocery shopping in Silverthorne with her Canadian women's teammates.

Grenier is upbeat and relieved near the end of another pain-free training camp in 2022, a big deal for those who have followed her career.

"I feel I'm doing [the same] volume as everyone else and I can go all-out every day," Grenier said over the phone recently. "I feel so good and I'm grateful for that because I haven't felt this way in a long time."

Unfortunately, Grenier had yet to complete a World Cup race this season after appearing to lose an edge on Nov. 26 during her opening run of the women's giant slalom in Killington, Vt. In November, she was set to race a GS at the World Cup opener that was cancelled due to rain and warm weather in Sölden, Austria.

Grenier returned to Canada in early December and finished 31st in Lake Louise, Alta. Banff National Park since 2018 when she was fifth and 5-100ths of a second behind bronze medallist Viktoria Rebensburg of Germany.

Two months later, Grenier broke her right leg in four places and her right ankle travelling about 130 kilometres per hour in a downhill training run at the world championships in Åre, Sweden. She needed a second surgery five months later when the bone wasn't healing properly.

Nearly four years after the crash, Grenier was ready to return to speed racing "for real" after a few unsuccessful attempts. She was back on skis Oct. 17, 2020 following multiple surgeries, physiotherapy and COVID-19, finishing 25th in giant slalom in Sölden. But it was a different story a month earlier when Grenier stood at the top of a mountain for her first training run post-injury and couldn't push out of the gate in Zermatt, Switzerland. The crash kept replaying in her head.

WATCH | Grenier suffers mental block upon return from injury:

Valerie Grenier finishes 4th in World Cup giant slalom competition

4 years ago
Duration 2:18
St. Isidore, Ont.'s Valérie Grenier came up just short of a medal, placing 4th in the women's giant slalom event at the FIS Alpine World Cup stop in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia.

The mental challenges forced Grenier to abandon thoughts of downhill or super-G and shift to giant slalom, a more technical and slower discipline. She raced 13 times before

I'm looking forward to going all-out, taking chances and risks and seeing what happens.— Canada's Valérie Grenier on racing super-G in Lake Louise, Alta.

more aware about the potential for injury while the risks she takes during competition are more calculated.

"I'm looking forward to going all-out, taking chances and risks and seeing what happens. I'm ready," said Grenier, who raced two FIS-level super-G events last month at Copper Mountain in Summit County, Colo.

WATCH | Grenier ties career-best finish in Slovenia in January of 2022:

Marie-Michèle Gagnon places 9th in World Cup downhill event at Lake Louise

4 years ago
Duration 2:29
Lac-Etchemin, Que.'s Marie-Michèle Gagnon finished 9th place in the women's downhill event during the FIS Alpine World Cup competition in Lake Louise, Alberta.

Harjo, who spent each of the previous five seasons as an assistant coach of the United States women's downhill team, admires Grenier's grit and confidence.

"She's so acutely aware of space and time [on the hill] which is good in this sport," said Harjo, who also worked as an assistant of the American women's slalom and giant slalom teams from 2015 to 2017. "Her ability to ramp it up when it's time and have that confidence to push without anything in the back of her mind is amazing."

The Lake Louise super-G was contested nearly eight years to the day of Grenier's World Cup debut at Lake Louise on Dec. 7, 2014, where she was 32nd.

Grenier has yet to medal in six-and-a-half seasons on the circuit, placing fourth in GS last January in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, to match her career-best result from a January 2019 super-G in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy.

Grenier placed fifth in 2:04.36 in Wednesday's giant slalom, the lone Canadian to advance past the first run in Semmering, Austria. A day earlier, she was disqualified after leaving the start house early while in podium contention after placing fourth in her opening run.

Grenier earned some redemption Wednesday by posting the fastest second-run time to climb from 12th spot. A week after Lake Louise, she was 12th in a giant slalom in Sestriere, Italy.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Doug Harrison has covered the professional and amateur scene as a senior writer for CBC Sports since 2003. Previously, the Burlington, Ont., native covered the NHL and other leagues for Faceoff.com. Follow the award-winning journalist @harrisoncbc

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