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  • Shiffrin caps injury-marred ski season with record-extending 60th win in slalom and 97th overall

    Shiffrin caps injury-marred ski season with record-extending 60th win in slalom and 97th overall

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    SAALBACH-HINTERGLEMM, Austria — For Mikaela Shiffrin, the award for the best slalom skier this season is different from the 15 crystal globes the American star won earlier in her career.

    This one, for a change, doesn’t feel like the end of a season.

    Shiffrin capped her campaign that was marred by a recent six-week injury layoff with her record-extending 60th win in slalom and 97th overall at the World Cup finals Saturday.

    She had already locked up her record-equaling eighth slalom season title last week by winning her first race back since hurting her knee in a downhill crash Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy in January, but globes are only handed over after the last race.

    “It was like a middle season for me. I’m probably the most excited one to be here. Everyone wants to be home and I’m like: ‘No! We’ve just started again’,” said Shiffrin, adding her feeling had “a lot to do with the crowd here cheering so much. It gives this emotion like what we want to feel at races, so I’m already excited to be back.”

    Shiffrin, who turned 29 on Wednesday, said on Instagram the slalom would be her last race of the season, skipping Sunday’s giant slalom and next week’s speed events.

    “I am so happy to have these final two races, like they give me something to be really proud of,” Shiffrin said.

    The two-time Olympic champion sprained the MCL and tibiofibular ligament in her knee, while also still recovering from a bone bruise she had sustained at the start of the season, when she was among a slew of World Cup, Olympic and world champions to crash hard in a packed January program, including her partner Aleksander Aamodt Kilde.

    “Oh wow, it’s been a wild season,” Shiffrin said. “I am excited to see Alex, I am excited to go home, but I don’t want the season to be over.”

    Shiffrin won nine of the 21 races she competed in this season, but had to concede the overall title after missing too many races when nursing her knee injury. The American has won the big globe five times since 2017, with Swiss skier Lara Gut-Behrami all but confirmed as the new champion.

    “I think it was quite a learning experience. There is always something you learn every season,” Shiffrin said. “This one taught me a lot about patience, a lot about trust, a lot about communication, and learning how to manage pain and still ski. Those are really important things that I hope will be useful for the rest of my career.”

    On Saturday, Shiffrin trailed Anna Swenn Larsson of Sweden after the first run but ultimately won the season-ending slalom by 0.54 seconds from Mina Fuerst Holtmann of Norway, while Swenn Larsson dropped to third, 0.63 off the pace.

    Winning back-to-back races to wrap up her season left Shiffrin three victories short of the 100-win mark, a milestone long deemed unreachable.

    With key rivals Petra Vlhova and Wendy Holdener ending their campaigns prematurely with injuries, Shiffrin has won seven slaloms this season, raising her career tally to 60. No other skier, male or female, has won more than 46 races in a single discipline.

    Asked in a course-side TV interview about her numbers of wins, Shiffrin took a breath before answering.

    “Just a little bit hard to process it all. It’s like these days just make me feel so invigorated, like so alive, and that’s what I’m focusing on. I’m trying to soak that all in,” she said.

    “I never really focused too much on the numbers, but now I feel OK with them, like it’s not pressure, it’s not anything, it’s just an honor.”

    On a first-run course set by Shiffrin’s coach Karin Harjo, Swenn Larsson was 0.11 second faster than Shiffrin.

    “I felt really good on my skis, I thought my equipment for this run was really good set up. I was pushing,” said Shiffrin, referring to the challenging course conditions after overnight rain softened the snow.

    “It was quite OK, so I could ski how I wanted. Ideally, I can be maybe a little bit more clean on a couple of sections, but actually I think I pushed about to my maximum there.”

    The next women’s race at the finals is the giant slalom on Sunday, when Gut-Behrami starts with a 95-point lead over her Italian challenger Federica Brignone.

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  • Shiffrin gets career win 95 in first World Cup slalom after season-ending injury for rival Vlhova

    Shiffrin gets career win 95 in first World Cup slalom after season-ending injury for rival Vlhova

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    JASNA, Slovakia — Mikaela Shiffrin earned her record-extending career win 95 by triumphing in a women’s World Cup slalom Sunday, a day after the American ski star’s main rival sustained a season-ending injury.

    In the first race without Olympic slalom champion Petra Vlhova, Shiffrin edged out Croatian teenager Zrinka Ljutic by 0.14 seconds. Sweden’s Anna Swenn Larsson in third and Switzerland’s Camille Rast in fourth were the only other racers to finish within a second of Shiffrin’s time.

    “We’re missing somebody really big today, we missed Petra a lot, so it’s wonderful that you stayed,” Shiffrin addressed the Slovakian spectators in a course-side interview.

    “It was not easy on the second (run), now I feel the energy has gone,” said the American, who led Ljutic by more than half a second after the opening run.

    “I could hear you cheering for Zrinka, which was actually quite cool from the start to hear this noise. I knew she put down an amazing run and I had to push.”

    It was Shiffrin’s fifth slalom win of the season and her 58th in total, a World Cup record for both men and women.

    Shiffrin also set a record for most World Cup podiums in a single discipline with 82, having shared the previous best mark with Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark, who had 81 top-three results in slalom in the 1970s and ’80s.

    Vlhova crashed and tore ligaments in her right knee in Saturday’s giant slalom near her hometown in the Tatra mountains.

    Shiffrin and Vlhova have been dominating women’s slalom skiing for years and combined to win 14 of the last 15 races, including all eight this season, in a series only interrupted by Lena Duerr when the German triumphed at the Czech resort Spindleruv Mlyn a year ago.

    “I have been thinking about (Vlhova) a lot the last 24 hours,” Shiffrin said. “For me, personally, over these years I have grown to love the battles with her. I think today she would have been so strong. So, I really miss watching her ski today and having that battle.”

    With Vlhova out of the race, Shiffrin is close to wrapping up her eighth World Cup season title in slalom, leading third-ranked Duerr by 228 points with three events left. With a race win being worth 100 points, Shiffrin can secure the title at the next slalom in Soldeu, Andorra, on Feb. 11.

    On Sunday, Duerr was 1.77 seconds off the lead in seventh.

    Vlhova became the third former overall champion who had their season end prematurely this month. On the men’s side, Alexis Pinturault and Aleksander Aamodt Kilde underwent surgery far various injuries after they crashed at speed races in Wengen, Switzerland.

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  • Shiffrin takes slalom for 89th World Cup win as 1st-run leader Vlhova fails to finish her second

    Shiffrin takes slalom for 89th World Cup win as 1st-run leader Vlhova fails to finish her second

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    American skier Mikaela Shiffrin has won a women’s World Cup slalom after first-run leader Petra Vlhova looked set for a clear victory until straddling a gate and not finishing her final run

    ByThe Associated Press

    November 12, 2023, 5:40 AM

    United States’ Mikaela Shiffrin reacts at the finish area of an alpine ski World Cup women’s slalom race, in Levi, Finland, Sunday, Nov. 12, 2023. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)

    The Associated Press

    LEVI, Finland — American skier Mikaela Shiffrin won a women’s World Cup slalom Sunday after first-run leader Petra Vlhova looked set for a clear victory until straddling a gate and not finishing her final run.

    Vlhova extended her big lead of 0.76 seconds over Shiffrin from the opening leg to more than a second when the Slovakian failed to clear a gate in the steep section midway down the Levi Black course.

    Shiffrin finished 0.18 ahead of Leona Popovic of Croatia, who earned her second career podium result, and 0.30 ahead of third-placed Lena Duerr of Germany.

    “Petra and her team, they earned this victory today. Actually, that was really bad luck for her,” Shiffrin said. “It’s a little bittersweet. I’m really happy with the victory, but I have to give her the credit. She earned it, probably a second and a half by the bottom, at least.”

    Shiffrin’s win followed a week in which the American had to reduce her time on snow after bruising a bone in her left knee in a training crash.

    The result marked the first top-three result of the season for Shiffrin and her record-extending 89th career World Cup win.

    The American won 14 races last season and her fifth overall title. Shiffrin started the new campaign with a sixth place in a giant slalom in Austria two weeks ago.

    Shiffrin finished fourth in Saturday’s race on the same hill, when Vlhova posted the fastest time in both runs to win by a big margin of 1.41 seconds over Duerr.

    “It was amazing to watch her ski these two days,” Shiffrin said of Vlhova.

    It was Shiffrin’s record seventh win in Levi, where no skier other than her or Vlhova has won the traditional season-opening slalom in Finnish Lapland since 2016.

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  • Shiffrin closes in on skiing record with first-run GS lead

    Shiffrin closes in on skiing record with first-run GS lead

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    Mikaela Shiffrin posted the fastest first-run time in the giant slalom at the World Cup Finals to position herself for a record 21st career win in the discipline

    SOLDEU, Andorra — Mikaela Shiffrin posted the fastest first-run time in the giant slalom at the World Cup Finals on Sunday, positioning herself for a record 21st career win in the discipline.

    Shiffrin could move past Vreni Schneider after matching the Swiss standout’s mark of 20 World Cup GS victories last week. The American has won six of the last seven events and took the GS world title last month.

    The overall record, between men and women, is held by Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark, who won 46 giant slaloms in the 1970s and 80s.

    Shiffrin has secured the overall, slalom and GS titles this season and set the record for most career wins with 87.

    Another race win would see the American set a personal best of 2,206 World Cup points from 31 starts this season, two points more than her tally from 2018-19, when she competed in 26 races.

    With the sun beaming down on the Avet course, Shiffrin opened the race in 56.60 seconds to build a lead of more than six-tenths of a second.

    “This run felt like the best I can do,” Shiffrin said. “I think it was really quite a bit of luck to draw bib 1 today. For sure, I had the best surface. And I also tried to be really active and take advantage of that.”

    Canada’s Valerie Grenier, Italy’s Marta Bassino and Poland’s Maryna Gasienica-Daniel all trailed the American by between 0.62 and 0.65.

    Three of the top seven ranked racers did not finish, as Petra Vlhova, who won Saturday’s slalom, Federica Brignone and Olympic champion Sara Hector all missed a gate.

    Lara Gut-Behrami lost a ski pole early in her run after hitting a gate with her left hand but the Swiss skier still posted the sixth-fastest time.

    Two-time former world champion Tessa Worley of France was seventh in what she said would be the last race of her career.

    The second run is scheduled for later Sunday.

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  • Swiss skier Odermatt wins giant slalom, 2nd gold at worlds

    Swiss skier Odermatt wins giant slalom, 2nd gold at worlds

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    COURCHEVEL, France — Swiss skier Marco Odermatt won the men’s giant slalom Friday for his second gold medal at the world championships.

    Odermatt, who is the Olympic giant slalom champion, was second after the opening run but beat Swiss teammate Loic Meillard by 0.32 seconds.

    First-run leader Marco Schwarz of Austria finished 0.40 seconds behind to take the bronze medal.

    “I actually didn’t expect to win,” Odermatt said. “Marco skied so well in the first run. He did some mistakes in the second, that helped me for gold.”

    Many fans were waving Swiss flags in the stands and chanted “Odi, Odi” when Odermatt won.

    “It’s amazing. So many great Swiss fans here, family, friends,” Odermatt said. “I came to the finish and I had to count a little bit. Yeah, two medals today for us.”

    Odermatt also won gold in downhill five days ago. He had not won a medal in his eight previous world championship races.

    Odermatt has been dominating the giant slalom on the World Cup circuit, winning four of the five events he competed in this season. The Swiss skier is on his way to successfully defending the overall World Cup title he won last year.

    Schwarz won the combined title at the worlds two years ago and was the 2020-21 World Cup slalom champion but has yet to win a top-level giant slalom.

    Schwarz won bronze in giant slalom at the worlds two years ago but only got his first World Cup podium in the discipline in the last race before the worlds, in Schladming, Austria in January.

    “Overall I am satisfied. I had a couple of mistakes in my second run that you cannot make on this level,” said the Austrian, who led Odermatt by 0.58 seconds after the opening run. “The pressure was a bit more than usual. I tried to keep the focus and I managed to do that well. Odi has been dominating the GS for two years now, so you have to acknowledge that.”

    Austrian skiers have yet to win an event at this year’s championships, two years after the team led the medals table at the worlds in Italy with five golds.

    The gold medal awarded in the men’s giant slalom was the 400th in world championships history. The first gold was won by British skier Esme Mackinnon in women’s slalom at the 1931 worlds in Switzerland.

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  • AP Interview: Moltzan catching up to US teammate Shiffrin

    AP Interview: Moltzan catching up to US teammate Shiffrin

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    MERIBEL, France — When Paula Moltzan finished second behind Mikaela Shiffrin for the U.S. ski team’s first 1-2 finish in a women’s World Cup slalom in more than half a century, it was easy to assume that her more successful teammate was her main inspiration.

    Actually, it’s another American skier who Moltzan still looks up to the most: Lindsey Vonn.

    It’s nothing against Shifrin, it’s just that Moltzan grew up skiing on the same hill in Minnesota where Vonn learned to race.

    Both of her parents were ski instructors at Buck Hill and Moltzan moved into the elite program led by Vonn’s former coach, Erich Sailer, when she was 12.

    “Lindsey has been an idol of mine my entire career. She’s so jaw droppingly inspiring,” Moltzan said. “Obviously, Mikaela is as well, but first and foremost for me Lindsey is an icon in my life.”

    Moltzan still remembers the first time she met Vonn.

    “She signed a poster for me when I was at Buck Hill. I was probably like 13 or 14,” Moltzan said in an interview with The Associated Press. “It was pretty awesome.”

    A year or two earlier, Moltzan first met Shiffrin, who is 11 months younger than her.

    “I’ve been Mikaela’s teammate for a really long time. I got sent a picture of us on the podium when we were at Whistler Cup when we were 12 or 13 so we’ve been skiing together for our whole life,” Moltzan said, referring to a big junior race in Canada.

    “We’ve had ebbs and flows of our relationship,” Moltzan said, adding that Shiffrin is now “a great friend to me.”

    But while Shiffrin is two wins away from eclipsing Ingemar Stenmark as the most successful World Cup skier of all time, Moltzan has only established herself among the world’s elite in recent seasons despite becoming a world junior champion in slalom eight years ago.

    With that second-place finish behind Shiffrin in Semmering, Austria, in December, combined with three fifth-place results this season, Moltzan has just joined Shiffrin in the top seven of the slalom start-list rankings — which gives her a big advantage by being able to ski on a cleaner course at the start of races.

    “That’s been a dream of mine since I was a little kid, so it’s a big box to check for me,” Moltzan said.

    Moltzan’s first race with that top-seven status will be her biggest event of the season, at the world championships, where the women’s slalom will be held on Saturday.

    First, though, Moltzan has three other races she wants to excel in at worlds: team parallel on Tuesday, individual parallel on Wednesday and giant slalom on Thursday. It’s a run of four races in five days.

    While Shiffrin won’t compete because it’s an event that’s hard on her back and she wants to focus on her individual events, the United States still has a strong squad in the team event with Moltzan joined by Nina O’Brien, River Radamus and Tommy Ford.

    Moltzan, especially, excels at parallel racing. In her three career individual races in the discipline, she has one second-place result and a fourth-place finish at the last worlds.

    So why is she such a beast in parallel?

    “I’m super hyper competitive. You can ask my teammates: I hate to lose training. I hate to lose anything,” she said. “So it’s just having that competitor right next to you in your peripherals. It just pushes me harder to ski fast, ski hard.

    “And it’s kind of the perfect combination between slalom and GS. I started off as a slalom (skier), have now built into a GS skier and I think parallel is that perfect in-between ground.”

    Moltzan competed strongly in the parallel team event at the Olympics and was the top American in both slalom (eighth) and giant slalom (12th) in Beijing — all despite skiing with a broken left hand. But nobody seemed to notice because Shiffrin surprisingly didn’t finish either the slalom or the GS.

    Moltzan broke her hand in mid-December last season but didn’t get it repaired until May.

    “It was really painful for that whole time,” she said. “(But) you just learn to build a lot of resilience. As a ski racer, little parts of your body are always hurting and sometimes it’s mind over matter. We have 1 minute to 1:30 runs and I think you can teach yourself to endure a little bit of pain for that long.”

    Earlier in her career, Moltzan wasn’t willing to push herself that hard, and consequently lost her spot on the U.S. team in 2016 because of poor results.

    So she enrolled at the University of Vermont and won the NCAA slalom title a year later. While still at UVM in 2018, she finished 17th in the World Cup slalom down the road at Killington, giving her enough World Cup points to head back over to Europe and resume World Cup racing.

    Only she still wasn’t part of the U.S. team, meaning she and then-boyfriend Ryan Mooney — who is still her ski technician and unofficial coach, as well as her husband after getting married in September — had to raise $50,000 on their own to travel and compete across the Alps.

    “It’s a performance driven sport,” explained U.S. Alpine director Patrick Riml. “At some point you got to ask the question, ’Does the athlete want it? Do they have the potential?’”

    Moltzan acknowledges that she was immature during her first stint with the team.

    “I grew up a lot when I went to university,” she said. “So I don’t hold any grudge or resentment toward the U.S. team. They did what they had to do and I did what I had to do.”

    During her three years of college, Moltzan majored in biology with a chemistry minor. But that’s on hold now.

    “You only get to be a professional athlete once,” she said. “So when I’m done skiing, I’ll go back to school and do my last year.”

    Then maybe medical school.

    “It’s a lot of school and a lot of work,” she said. “But I put in a lot of work into a lot of things in my life. … Step by step.”

    ___

    Andrew Dampf is at https://twitter.com/AndrewDampf

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  • AP Interview: Moltzan catching up to US teammate Shiffrin

    AP Interview: Moltzan catching up to US teammate Shiffrin

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    MERIBEL, France — When Paula Moltzan finished second behind Mikaela Shiffrin for the U.S. ski team’s first 1-2 finish in a women’s World Cup slalom in more than half a century, it was easy to assume that her more successful teammate was her main inspiration.

    Actually, it’s another American skier who Moltzan still looks up to the most: Lindsey Vonn.

    It’s nothing against Shifrin, it’s just that Moltzan grew up skiing on the same hill in Minnesota where Vonn learned to race.

    Both of her parents were ski instructors at Buck Hill and Moltzan moved into the elite program led by Vonn’s former coach, Erich Sailer, when she was 12.

    “Lindsey has been an idol of mine my entire career. She’s so jaw droppingly inspiring,” Moltzan said. “Obviously, Mikaela is as well, but first and foremost for me Lindsey is an icon in my life.”

    Moltzan still remembers the first time she met Vonn.

    “She signed a poster for me when I was at Buck Hill. I was probably like 13 or 14,” Moltzan said in an interview with The Associated Press. “It was pretty awesome.”

    A year or two earlier, Moltzan first met Shiffrin, who is 11 months younger than her.

    “I’ve been Mikaela’s teammate for a really long time. I got sent a picture of us on the podium when we were at Whistler Cup when we were 12 or 13 so we’ve been skiing together for our whole life,” Moltzan said, referring to a big junior race in Canada.

    “We’ve had ebbs and flows of our relationship,” Moltzan said, adding that Shiffrin is now “a great friend to me.”

    But while Shiffrin is two wins away from eclipsing Ingemar Stenmark as the most successful World Cup skier of all time, Moltzan has only established herself among the world’s elite in recent seasons despite becoming a world junior champion in slalom eight years ago.

    With that second-place finish behind Shiffrin in Semmering, Austria, in December, combined with three fifth-place results this season, Moltzan has just joined Shiffrin in the top seven of the slalom start-list rankings — which gives her a big advantage by being able to ski on a cleaner course at the start of races.

    “That’s been a dream of mine since I was a little kid, so it’s a big box to check for me,” Moltzan said.

    Moltzan’s first race with that top-seven status will be her biggest event of the season, at the world championships, where the women’s slalom will be held on Saturday.

    First, though, Moltzan has three other races she wants to excel in at worlds: team parallel on Tuesday, individual parallel on Wednesday and giant slalom on Thursday. It’s a run of four races in five days.

    While Shiffrin won’t compete because it’s an event that’s hard on her back and she wants to focus on her individual events, the United States still has a strong squad in the team event with Moltzan joined by Nina O’Brien, River Radamus and Tommy Ford.

    Moltzan, especially, excels at parallel racing. In her three career individual races in the discipline, she has one second-place result and a fourth-place finish at the last worlds.

    So why is she such a beast in parallel?

    “I’m super hyper competitive. You can ask my teammates: I hate to lose training. I hate to lose anything,” she said. “So it’s just having that competitor right next to you in your peripherals. It just pushes me harder to ski fast, ski hard.

    “And it’s kind of the perfect combination between slalom and GS. I started off as a slalom (skier), have now built into a GS skier and I think parallel is that perfect in-between ground.”

    Moltzan competed strongly in the parallel team event at the Olympics and was the top American in both slalom (eighth) and giant slalom (12th) in Beijing — all despite skiing with a broken left hand. But nobody seemed to notice because Shiffrin surprisingly didn’t finish either the slalom or the GS.

    Moltzan broke her hand in mid-December last season but didn’t get it repaired until May.

    “It was really painful for that whole time,” she said. “(But) you just learn to build a lot of resilience. As a ski racer, little parts of your body are always hurting and sometimes it’s mind over matter. We have 1 minute to 1:30 runs and I think you can teach yourself to endure a little bit of pain for that long.”

    Earlier in her career, Moltzan wasn’t willing to push herself that hard, and consequently lost her spot on the U.S. team in 2016 because of poor results.

    So she enrolled at the University of Vermont and won the NCAA slalom title a year later. While still at UVM in 2018, she finished 17th in the World Cup slalom down the road at Killington, giving her enough World Cup points to head back over to Europe and resume World Cup racing.

    Only she still wasn’t part of the U.S. team, meaning she and then-boyfriend Ryan Mooney — who is still her ski technician and unofficial coach, as well as her husband after getting married in September — had to raise $50,000 on their own to travel and compete across the Alps.

    “It’s a performance driven sport,” explained U.S. Alpine director Patrick Riml. “At some point you got to ask the question, ’Does the athlete want it? Do they have the potential?’”

    Moltzan acknowledges that she was immature during her first stint with the team.

    “I grew up a lot when I went to university,” she said. “So I don’t hold any grudge or resentment toward the U.S. team. They did what they had to do and I did what I had to do.”

    During her three years of college, Moltzan majored in biology with a chemistry minor. But that’s on hold now.

    “You only get to be a professional athlete once,” she said. “So when I’m done skiing, I’ll go back to school and do my last year.”

    Then maybe medical school.

    “It’s a lot of school and a lot of work,” she said. “But I put in a lot of work into a lot of things in my life. … Step by step.”

    ___

    Andrew Dampf is at https://twitter.com/AndrewDampf

    ___

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  • Shiffrin’s Beijing lesson helps after another big-race DNF

    Shiffrin’s Beijing lesson helps after another big-race DNF

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    MERIBEL, France (AP) — Practically the only person not asking Mikaela Shiffrin if this was the Beijing Olympics all over again was herself.

    That’s because the American skier learned so much from that disappointing performance a year ago when she didn’t finish three of her five individual races and didn’t win a medal amid enormous expectations. She was able to quickly compartmentalize another DNF — “Did Not Finish” in skiing lingo — on Monday in the opening race of the world championships.

    This time, Shiffrin straddled the third-to-last gate in the slalom portion of the combined race, ending what had appeared destined to be a gold-medal winning run.

    “Everyone’s going to ask, ‘Oh is this Beijing again?’” she said. “I didn’t really think about that for myself, but more for the people asking.

    “But I also said before coming into this world champs multiple times, I’m not afraid if it happens again,” Shiffrin added, her voice cracking with emotion. “What if I don’t finish every run like what happened last year? I survived and I’ve had some pretty amazing races this season. So I would take the season that I’ve had with no medals at the world championships. But I’m going to be pushing for medals because that’s what you do at world champs. … And I’m not afraid of the consequences as long as I have that mentality, which I had today. So, it’s good.”

    It’s the same mentality Shiffrin has had all season, as she’s won 11 of her 23 World Cup races to put her well on her way to a fifth overall title — generally regarded as the most important prize in ski racing.

    She won three races within six days two weeks ago to raise her career tally to 85 World Cup wins, breaking former teammate Lindsey Vonn’s women’s record of 82 and moving within one of the overall mark set by Ingemar Stenmark in the 1970s and 80s.

    World championship races do not count toward World Cup wins. It’s the medals that skiers are after.

    Having stood sixth and nearly a full second behind eventual gold medalist Federica Brignone after the super-G run, Shiffrin was charging to make up time in the slalom leg and was doing a great job at that until she lost control and stuck her right ski high in the air like an acrobat to regain her balance. The recovery, however, forced Shiffrin to place one ski on the wrong side of a red gate.

    In a split second, she went from eyeing gold to being disqualified.

    Seconds later, when she came to a stop in the finish area and realized what happened, Shiffrin dropped her mouth open incredulously. Then she rested on her ski poles and started analyzing what went wrong. Or better yet, what went right.

    Because to be fair, this was an improvement from Beijing, where she often fell early in her runs and was nowhere near the form she’s in now.

    “Of course, I’m disappointed not to finish and not to get a medal, but I’m also quite excited because I was skiing really well,” Shiffrin said as the Italian anthem played and Brignone was awarded the winner’s honors right behind her. “My mentality in the start for the slalom was to take all the risk, full-gas skiing top to bottom, push the whole way and take the risk that it might not work. I might ski off the course because slalom is like that — there’s no room for error.”

    Grippier snow at the end of the Roc de Fer course — the slope used for the 1992 Albertville Olympics — tripped Shiffrin up.

    “I saw that in inspection,” she said. “So I thought, ‘I have to be very strong with my position. I have to stay active, but I can’t take my foot off the gas. And this could be a section that’s tricky. It could be something that actually gets me if I take the full speed of the course.’ And in the end it did.”

    The biggest positive takeaway was that she made up all of the time on Brignone before her mishap.

    “I didn’t know if I could do that,” said Shiffrin, who didn’t finish a run of a technical race for the first time since the Olympics. “So I’m excited that I accomplished that.”

    Now Shiffrin has a day to recover before racing again Wednesday in the super-G, an event she won’t be the outright favorite in. Then she’ll likely leave Meribel for several days to train elsewhere for her best events of giant slalom and slalom at the end of next week.

    “I love how I’m skiing. I love the feeling I have every time I get on my skis, no matter what event,” Shiffrin said. “Unfortunately, you also have to face the side of the sport where it doesn’t work, you don’t finish and everyone’s disappointed — that’s the negative side or the sad side. But overall, it’s just been such an insane, amazing season and I feel like I don’t have to get motivated. I just keep it rolling and keep going with the skiing I have because it’s been the best I’ve ever done.”

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    Andrew Dampf is at https://twitter.com/AndrewDampf

    ___

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  • Chasing 80th win, Shiffrin holds big 1st-run lead in slalom

    Chasing 80th win, Shiffrin holds big 1st-run lead in slalom

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    SEMMERING, Austria — Mikaela Shiffrin took a big lead in the opening run of a women’s World Cup slalom Thursday, positioning herself for a third win in three days and 80th overall.

    Coming off back-to-back giant slalom wins, Shiffrin was more than seven-tenths of a second faster than her closest challenger, Sweden’s Anna Swenn Larsson.

    Shiffrin’s American teammate Paula Moltzan and Lena Dürr of Germany were the only others within a second of the lead.

    Shiffrin’s biggest rivals in slalom, Petra Vlhová and Wendy Holdener, were just outside the one-second mark.

    “I felt really good. I was firing, so that was a very, very good run and, to be honest, it was just a pleasure to ski,” Shiffrin said. “But it’s difficult and I think it can be quite bumpy on the second, so the race is certainly not over yet.”

    A win would leave Shiffrin two victories short of Lindsey Vonn’s women’s record of 82 World Cup wins. Shiffrin could then match her former teammate’s achievement next week, when two slaloms are scheduled in Zagreb, Croatia.

    Only Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark won more races than Vonn and Shiffrin, with 86.

    Shiffrin already holds the overall record for most wins a single discipline, with 49 in slalom.

    Adding to its usual schedule of a GS and a slalom, Semmering this time hosted a giant slalom that was canceled in another Austrian resort, Sölden, in October.

    Shiffrin won all three events the previous time the resort near the capital Vienna staged races on three consecutive days, in December 2016.

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  • Kranjec leads 1st run in Alta Badia as Odermatt struggles

    Kranjec leads 1st run in Alta Badia as Odermatt struggles

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    LA VILLA, Italy — Olympic silver medalist Zan Kranjec led the opening run of the Alta Badia giant slalom on Sunday while overall World Cup leader Marco Odermatt struggled in ninth place.

    Kranjec, a Slovenian skier, posted a significant advantage ahead of two Norwegians.

    Henrik Kristoffersen stood 0.60 seconds behind Kranjec in second and Lucas Braathen was 0.73 back in third.

    Odermatt, who appeared fatigued following several days of downhill racing in Val Gardena, had 1.42 to make up in the second leg later on the Gran Risa course.

    Kranjec trailed Braathen at the final checkpoint but made up time on the flatter bottom section.

    At the Beijing Olympics last winter, Kranjec was the only racer to seriously challenge Odermatt, who took gold amid a blizzard.

    Odermatt won the opening two giant slaloms this season while Kranjec finished second and third in Sölden, Austria, and Val d’Isere, France, respectively.

    Still, Odermatt can extend his lead in the overall category, after Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, who is second in the standings, didn’t finish his run.

    Kranjec is chasing his third World Cup win, which would match Jure Kosir, the bronze medalist in slalom at the 1994 Olympics, as the most by a Slovenian man.

    River Radamus and Tommy Ford, the top American GS skiers, both had trouble.

    Radamus, who finished fourth at the Olympics, fell down on his left hip on the upper section and didn’t finish. Ford also lost control and had to check his skis to make the next gate, eventually crossing nearly 5 seconds behind.

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