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U.S. Ski Team report
August 13, 2006
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, Colo. — Former
Truckee resident Caroline Lalive turned 27 last week, and she’s
hoping a delayed birthday present will be U.S. Ski Team surgeon Dr.
William Sterett saying her injured kneecap is healing nicely and she
can be back on skis in October or November.
Lalive, who
celebrated her 27th birthday last Thursday, shattered her left
kneecap and femur, and tore a quad tendon Jan. 25 in an awkward
landing off a jump during downhill training in Cortina d’Ampezzo,
Italy.
Ironically, it took place the same day she was named
to her third Olympic Team; she watched the Torino Winter Games on TV
at home.
Doctors in Italy said her patella was broken into
“four or five” pieces, but Sterett, who is on the staff of the famed
Steadman-Hawkins Clinic at Colorado’s Vail Valley Medical Center,
said her kneecap was in dozens of pieces. Lalive has undergone
operations to repair the kneecap and stabilize her femur, the large
bone in a person’s thigh. Now she’s looking to continue ski
racing.
“I’ve been able to be a lot more active, which is
always good,” said Lalive, who now lives in Steamboat Springs, Colo.
“I’m just waiting for my strength to come around. I’ll have another
surgery in the next week or two, and hopefully it will all be
forward from there.
“Hopefully, Dr. Sterett will just be
taking out my hardware, well, not all of it, but some, and checking
on my femur as well to see how it’s healed. I hope it’ll all be
looking good and I’ll get the green light to continue.
“I
can’t wait for them to look under the hood and see what’s
there.”
Melinda Roalstad, medical director for the U.S. Ski
Team, said, “We should have a good idea of how Caroline’s
progressing with this next surgery. She’s definitely doing much
better and making faster progress than we had anticipated, but
there’s no thought at all on a date when she could return to
skiing.”
Lalive’s recovery, of late, has included plenty of
physical activity — especially biking and hiking. She takes daily
hikes, walking with her dog — a 2-year-old yorkie named Puppy — and
her sister’s mutt, Kaya.
“I try to take ‘em swimming daily in
the river or the creeks around here,” she said. “It’s good to let
‘em get out and go swimming; it’s good for them ... and for me. The
dogs are awesome.
“I think just with improved mobility in my
life and getting back to enjoying the small things helps
everything.”
There has been activity of a mental sort, too.
“Really, my life’s pretty simple — therapy, school,” she
said.
She’s been taking classes at Colorado Mountain College
in Steamboat, one course on psychology and another on western
civilization.
“Yup, that’s me — the (27)-year-old freshman,”
she said with a laugh. “I’ll have a three-week break and then fall
back with the studies in the fall semester.
“It’s been really
good to get my brain going again. It’s been hard; you forget how to
study, how to take tests. I’m used to training, to the physical side
and not the mental, so this has been a good change, a different kind
of discipline and it brings some good balance for my life, too, so
it’s not all just training and skiing.”
One big step in her
recovery, Lalive said, was getting permission to ride a bike in
March, then she stopped using a cane in May.
“I’m phasing
myself back into normal living. Every day you’re closer to regular
living. I was going to therapy three or four days a week, and now
I’m at the stage where it’s more strengthening and not so much
therapy-oriented,” she said.
“It’s all part of the
transition. I still go in to check-in and see how it’s going.
Y’know, you feel better because there are more tangible and visual
ways of improvement. I still have days when I’m far from where I
want to be, but I look back to where I was and this is definitely so
encouraging."
If all goes according to plan, Lalive hopes to
be skiing again well before winter arrives.
“My main emphasis
is just my strength, and getting into a position where I’m going to
ski strong and confidently. Then my goal — if all goes as I hope —
is to start free skiing come October or November, and then go from
there.
“I’m not going to rush things, just see how every day
pans out.”
Although she has battled other injuries in her
career, Lalive — who all but clinched an Olympic spot last December
when she finished second behind teammate Lindsey Kildow in a
downhill in Val d’Isere, France — said this multi-faceted situation
is like nothing she’s experienced.
“Being an athlete, you
certainly want to be better now, but the whole process is another
learning experience. I couldn’t walk for so long, then I was using a
cane. It’s just something you have to go through. This injury is not
like an ACL where you have a reference for time. An ACL is pretty
pat for skiers with six or eight months as a time frame. With this,
though, everyone is watching to see how it goes.”
Lalive is
light years ahead of where she was six months ago, and she’s looking
to keep her medical momentum moving forward quickly and
safely.
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