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  • GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, GERMANY - MARCH 12: (FRANCE OUT) Lindsey Vonn of...

    GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, GERMANY - MARCH 12: (FRANCE OUT) Lindsey Vonn of the USA takes the globe for the overall World Cup Super G during the Audi FIS Alpine Ski World Cup Women's Super G on March 12, 2010 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany.

  • Winner US Lindsey Vonn celebrates in the finish area after...

    Winner US Lindsey Vonn celebrates in the finish area after the men's Alpine skiing World Cup Giant Slalom finals in Garmisch Partenkirchen, southern Germany on March 12, 2010. AFP PHOTO / SAMUEL KUBANI

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DENVER, CO - JANUARY 13 : Denver Post's John Meyer on Monday, January 13, 2014.  (Photo By Cyrus McCrimmon/The Denver Post)
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Lindsey Vonn didn’t even have to race today to clinch her unprecedented third-straight World Cup overall title, but she did anyway — and she won.

Waiting at the start during the final super-G of the season in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, Vonn got word that Germany’s Maria Riesch was in third place with Vonn and two other racers remaining. Riesch had to finish second or better to have any chance of overtaking Vonn.

Vonn could have chosen not to start — in Thursday’s giant slalom, she added to her long list of aches and pains by incurring a bone bruise to her right knee — but she went out and won her 11th World Cup race of the season.

That broke the American record she set last year for most World Cup races won in a season (nine). It also gave her 33 career wins, the most for an American. Vonn had been in a tie with Bode Miller.

“I was more relieved than anything else,” Vonn said of the news about Riesch. “I just said, ‘OK, the overall title is clinched, now I need to focus on trying to win this race.’ Even though I had an injury to my right knee during the GS race, it was less painful than the shin injury at the Olympics, so I said, ‘OK, you’ve done this before, you’ve dealt with pain, just go out and ski your best.’

“It was the best way to end such an amazing season.”

Vonn won an Olympic gold medal in downhill and bronze in super-G. She won World Cup discipline titles in downhill, super-G and super-combined.

Vonn also tied one of the most hallowed records in American skiing. She and Phil Mahre (1981-83) are the only Americans to win three World Cup overall titles. Bode Miller won two (2005, 2008) and Tamara McKinney one (1983).

“It’s been such a long season, and I’ve definitely had my share of injuries this year, but to come away with four titles, it’s just overwhelming,” Vonn said. “Going into a season you always hope you can have this kind of success, but to actually be able to achieve it is beyond what I was expecting for sure.

“I’m just completely ecstatic, but I’m happy to be done with the year and finally get a chance to heal my body. It’s definitely hurting after this long season.”

Vonn suffered a bone bruise to her left wrist in December, a bruised right shin just before the Olympics that made her participation there questionable, and a broken right pinkie finger in the Olympics GS. Vonn said Thursday’s knee injury will not require surgery, just rest and an avoidance of impact for four to six weeks. She will skip today’s slalom at the World Cup Finals.

“My body is pretty much completely broken,” Vonn said.

Vonn wasn’t the only source of pride for the U.S. Ski Team Friday. Ted Ligety of Park City, Utah, finished third in the men’s GS and clinched the GS season title for the second time. He also won in 2008.

Ligety was an Olympic medal hopeful in GS, super-combined and slalom, but his best finish at the Olympics was fifth in the combined. He and Mahre are the only U.S. men to win two World Cup GS titles.

“It definitely salvages the season a little bit,” Ligety said. “The Olympics were definitely a big bummer, and I surrounded the Olympics (with podium finishes), and it’s a bummer that the timing didn’t go in the right side of that. But it’s pretty sweet to walk away with the season title. The Olympics is just the one race, and doesn’t always depict the best guys. To win the season title is pretty meaningful in that respect.”

John Meyer: 303-954-1616 or jmeyer@denverpost.com