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Tag: Mikaela Shiffrin

  • Renck: For courageous Mikaela Shiffrin, overcoming mental burden is worth wait in gold

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    Only GOATs chase ghosts. Only the best are defined by legacies, not victories.

    Mikaela Shiffrin was choking.

    That is what people were saying. That is what they were thinking.

    When you are to skiing what Serena Williams is to tennis, there is no grace, no free passes.

    As Americans, we only watch the winter sports at the Olympics. It makes performances the equivalent of a college final exam, disproportionately weighted.

    It is not fair. But it is who we are.

    On the biggest stage — Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Finals — championships provide exclamation points in barstool arguments.

    On Wednesday in Cortina, Italy, Shiffrin shut up her critics.

    The silence was as golden as her medal.

    But it wasn’t about the haters. This was about her.

    She gets the credit.

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    Troy Renck

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  • Mikaela Shiffrin’s giant slalom at Milan Cortina ended without a medal but plenty of optimism

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    CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — Mikaela Shiffrin stood at the start gate atop the giant slalom course at sun-splashed Tofane and made a promise to herself.

    “I’m going to do this whole thing here,” she said.

    Considering the path the American star has taken to reach the Milan Cortina Olympics, and to this event in particular, that was enough.

    So while the leaderboard near the finish line during Sunday’s GS needed to flip to the second page before Shiffrin’s name appeared in 11th, the most decorated skier in the history of the sport didn’t view her finish as a disappointment.

    Disappointment is washing out, which she did four years ago in Beijing. Disappointment is wondering if the speed that once came so easily would ever return while recovering from a harrowing crash during a World Cup start in Killington, Vermont, in late 2024 that left her abdomen punctured and her confidence shaken.

    What happened during what Shiffrin called “the greatest show of GS skiing we’ve had in a really long time” was not disappointment. If anything, it was the opposite.

    Yes, Shiffrin finished outside the top 10. The way the snow felt underneath her skis and the razor-thin margin that separated the silver medalists from the chasing pack — there was no catching Italy’s Federica Brignone on this day — offered evidence she’s trending in the right direction heading into slalom, her best event, on Wednesday.

    “To be here now like within touch of the fastest women, that’s huge for me,” Shiffrin said. “So I’m proud of that.”

    The gap between Shiffrin and co-runners-up Sara Hector of Sweden and Thea Louise Stjernesund was an impossibly tight 0.3 seconds in a discipline that requires skiers to make two runs.

    When Shiffrin won gold in the GS in Pyeongchang eight years ago, the gap between silver and 11th was around 1.4 seconds. Four years ago in Beijing, it was nearly 2 seconds. Three weeks ago at a World Cup event in Czechia, where Shiffrin earned her first podium in the GS in two years, it was over 3 1/2 seconds.

    On Sunday, Shiffrin was right there. A turn here. A turn there. On a course that was a little flatter and a little less technically demanding that what Shiffrin and the rest of the best skiers in the world usually see — one almost explicitly designed to create a safe and ultracompetitive race — the difference between a medal and the middle was nearly imperceptible.

    Shiffrin promised to “learn” after slogging down through the slalom in the women’s combined last week, when her skis couldn’t seem to “go.” Perhaps too aware of the perception of an Olympic slump — the Games are the only place she hasn’t won in the last eight years — she did her best to refocus and block out the noise.

    In her mind, she did just that. She could feel herself taking power from the course. As “Killing In The Name Of” by Rage Against the Machine blasted over the speakers during her second run, Shiffrin felt like she was in the moment and not in her head.

    “It felt good to push, which was amazing,” she said, later adding: “It felt really good to ski high intensity.”

    Shiffrin’s intensity feels as if it is slowly but steadily ramping up. She wore bib No. 3, a nod to the fact she’s back in the top 7 in the world in the GS, something she considered a “challenging task” when the season began. It’s become doable, but Shiffrin has learned progress isn’t linear.

    While she continues to dominate slalom — in which she’s already clinched her ninth World Cup series title with two races to go — GS is another matter. Sure, Shiffrin’s 22 career GS victories are a record. But she hasn’t won a GS race since late 2023.

    Her climb back up the GS rankings has been fueled by consistency. The “lights-out speed” she knows is required to finish atop the podium doesn’t come quite as easily as it did when she was at the peak of her powers. That’s fine.

    “The task ahead of me for the coming months (and) in the coming years is to try to bring that kind of intensity and fire and to continue to work with the team to find those hundredths (of a second) that it takes to actually win races,” she said.

    That didn’t happen under the snowcapped peaks of the Dolomites on Sunday. Maybe on another course, one with a more difficult setup that would allow her to lean in to her experience, things may have played out differently.

    It’s not a conversation Shiffrin seems particularly interested in having. The layout allowed for competitive racing. And she pointed to the medal stand — where the 35-year-old Brignone won her second gold in four days and Hector added silver to go with the gold she captured in Beijing in 2022 — as proof the results were not fluky.

    “It wasn’t like somebody won who wasn’t supposed to win,” Shiffrin said.

    Brignone emerged as a deserving champion. Behind her, however, was chaos. Shiffrin doesn’t think that’s a bad thing.

    “(We were all) close and that’s how that’s how high the competition level, is I think,” she said. “That’s a beautiful show of our sport on an Olympic stage.”

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    AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

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    The Associated Press

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  • US names 232-athlete roster for Milan Cortina Olympics, led by five-timers including Vonn, Humphries

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    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — The U.S. team released its 232-athlete roster for the Milan Cortina Olympics on Monday and it includes Lindsey Vonn and bobsledders Kaillie Humphries and Elana Meyers Taylor, who are among the seven Americans making their fifth trip to the games.

    Other five-timers are hockey player Hilary Knight, figure skater Evan Bates and snowboarders Faye Thelen and Nick Baumgartner.

    Meyers Taylor leads a group of 33 returning medalists. She has won three silver medals and two bronze while Humphries has taken three gold. Mikaela Shiffrin and Chloe Kim have two golds each.

    United States’ Mikaela Shiffrin celebrates on podium after winning an alpine ski, women’s World Cup slalom, in Spindleruv Mlyn, Czech Republic, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)

    The team consists of 117 men and 115 women ranging in age from 15 (freeskier Abby Winterberger) to 54 (curler Rich Ruohonen).

    The opening ceremony is set for Feb. 6 in Milan, with some competition beginning Feb. 4.

    These will be the most spread-out Olympics in history, with Milan serving as a home base for hockey, figure skating and speedskating and Cortina and a handful of other mountain clusters hosting skiing, snowboarding, biathlon, sliding sports and the new Olympic sport of ski mountaineering.

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    The Associated Press

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  • Shiffrin wins gold, thanks former coach after surprise split

    Shiffrin wins gold, thanks former coach after surprise split

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    MERIBEL, France (AP) — Mikaela Shiffrin covered her mouth with her fluorescent orange mittens and then collapsed to the snow, still breathing heavily as her entire body pulsated from the exertion of her gold medal-winning run.

    What a relief after a hectic week for the American skier.

    Having endured a small protest aimed at her by environmentalists who mistakenly thought she was using a helicopter for training, Shiffrin’s team was thrown into disarray two days before the giant slalom at the world championships when her longtime coach, Mike Day, left suddenly when Shiffrin told him she wanted to change her staff at the end of the season.

    “It’s been definitely some high levels of stress these days,” Shiffrin said. “It was very, very difficult today to keep the focus and keep the intensity on the right level.”

    Day had coached Shiffrin since 2016 and was with her for 65 of her 85 World Cup wins. Shiffrin needs just one more win to match Ingemar Stenmark’s overall record of 86 victories, having already broken Lindsey Vonn’s women’s mark of 82 wins.

    While wins at worlds don’t count toward the World Cup totals, that was the last thing on Shiffrin’s mind Thursday.

    “One thing I really want to say is just, ‘Thank you,’ to Mike for seven years of — I can’t even say helping me — he’s been such an integral part of my team and being there to support me through some of the most incredible moments in my career and some of the most challenging moments of my career and also my life,” Shiffrin said, her voice cracking with emotion.

    Shiffrin has now won two straight medals after taking silver in super-G, ending an unfortunate run in major championship races. She didn’t finish three of her five individual races at last year’s Beijing Olympics and didn’t win a medal despite enormous expectations — then also didn’t finish her first race at these worlds, when she straddled three gates from the finish of the combined to throw away what would have surely been gold.

    Nobody on Shiffrin’s personal team, which is also led by her mother, Eileen, who also coaches her, expected Day to react the way that he did.

    “It’s just a little bit sad how it came down,” Shiffrin said, adding that she was hoping to give Day “the time and the notice” to figure out his own plans before the end of the season but that his decision to leave immediately was “difficult for all of us to imagine” after “being such a tight group, really a family.”

    The entire skiing circuit is like a family, too, with rivals on the slopes often sleeping in the same Alpine chalets and sharing dinners as they travel together all winter on what is known as the “White Circus.”

    That tight-knit bond that the skiers feel for each other was evident when Federica Brignone and Ragnhild Mowinckel rushed over to congratulate Shiffrin while she was still lying on the snow, then jumped on top of her.

    Brignone finished a mere 0.12 seconds behind Shiffrin to take the silver, adding to the Italian’s gold in combined, and Mowinckel of Norway finished 0.22 behind for the bronze.

    French skier Tessa Worley, who was second after the opening run, slid on her inside ski and fell in her second run.

    “I didn’t want to go for a medal, I wanted to go for the win,” said Worley, a two-time giant slalom world champion who had the added pressure of skiing in front of her home fans.

    Brignone spent four days at home in bed with a fever before this race and has also been mourning former teammate Elena Fanchini, who died last week of a tumor at age 37.

    “It’s also been an emotional time for us,” Brignone said.

    Shiffrin won the giant slalom at the 2018 Olympics but this was her first world title in the discipline, making her only the fourth female skier to win world titles in four different disciplines, after previously winning four golds in slalom, one in super-G and the combined gold two years ago.

    It raises Shiffrin’s tally to seven world titles and 13 medals overall from 16 career world championship races. She’s in second place behind German skier Christl Cranz on the all-time list for the most individual medals won by a woman at the worlds. Cranz won 15 medals in the 1930s.

    “Coaches are important but Shiffrin is still Shiffrin,” said super-G champion Marta Bassino, who finished fifth. “She wasn’t depending (only) on (Day). Let’s not take anything away from him or the other coaches, with all due respect, but look at her.”

    Nina O’Brien posted the second-fastest time in the final run and improved from 21st to 11th position, while American teammate Paula Moltzan spun around and missed a gate halfway through her first run and did not finish. Moltzan fractured her hand in Tuesday’s team event, which the U.S. team won. Shiffrin did not compete in that event.

    “The hand is as good as it was going to feel so I’m not disappointed with that,” said Moltzan, who had her glove taped to her ski pole during her run. “I think I just misjudged my turn a tiny bit and came inside a bit and couldn’t recover.”

    The men’s giant slalom is scheduled for Friday then Shiffrin’s last race at worlds is the slalom — her best event — on Saturday.

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    Willemsen reported from Vienna.

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    More AP skiing: https://apnews.com/hub/skiing and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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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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    More AP skiing: https://apnews.com/hub/skiing and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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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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    More AP skiing: https://apnews.com/hub/skiing and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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