Albuquerque Journal

Shiffrin’s wins stack up, bode well for 2018

World Cup events seem like a breeze

- BY ERIC WILLEMSEN ASSOCIATED PRESS

Four years ago Mikaela Shiffrin had a “crazy” dream of winning five gold medals at the 2018 Olympics. That aim is seeming less and less unrealisti­c.

Just after becoming the youngest ever Olympic slalom champion at the Sochi Games, the then 18-year-old Shiffrin dreamed aloud “of the next Olympics (and) winning five gold medals.”

Right away she admitted her ambition “sounds really crazy.”

However, less than five weeks ahead of the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, that number seems more obtainable than ever before.

Shiffrin probably won’t win that handful of gold medals, but mainly because she is unlikely to enter five different events in South Korea.

She will only decide on short notice which events she is going to enter at the Olympics.

Unlike at previous games, this time the technical races of giant slalom and slalom are the first events on the women’s Alpine Olympic schedule, enabling Shiffrin to compete in her core discipline­s before making up her mind on possible starts in the speed events of downhill and super-G, and the concluding combined and team events.

Developed into a potential winner of every race she competes in, and even triumphing for the first time in a downhill in December, Shiffrin has been dominating the Alpine skiing World Cup for months.

Her win in a slalom in Slovenia on Sunday was her ninth of the season, and seventh out of the last eight races, boosting her career total to 40.

That number leaves her one short of the all-time record for most World Cup wins by a 22-year-old, set by Austrian great Annemarie Moser-Proell in the 1970s.

With the World Cup season approachin­g the halfway mark, Shiffrin is leading the overall standings as well as every single discipline except for super-G, the only event she hasn’t won yet.

Her season stats even far exceed her achievemen­ts from last year, when she became the third American female skier after Tamara McKinney and four-time champion Lindsey Vonn to win the overall title.

Though winning is not all what Shiffrin is after.

“It’s a good way to put it that I am not competing, I am just enjoying every turn that I make, to make every turn aggressive,” Shiffrin said. “Right now I am just enjoying that so much, the skiing, that it’s even more important than the winning.” Still, the wins keep piling up. With 100 points for every victory, Shiffrin has racked up 1,281 World Cup points after 18 of this season’s 38 races and looks set to break the record for the most World Cup points in a single season — 2,414 by retired Slovenian great Tina Maze, a record many deemed unbreakabl­e.

In her main event, Shiffrin is not just winning, she is crushing the field. She triumphed in the past four slaloms by margins of 1.64, 0.89, 1.59 and again 1.64 seconds — a country mile in the sport.

Having won 20 of the last 25 slaloms she entered, it’s hard to see past Shiffrin for gold at the Pyeongchan­g Games, even if the American doesn’t regard herself unbeatable by any means.

“Every single of the competitor­s can match,” she said. “That makes me even more motivated to keep moving forward.”

 ?? MARCO TACCA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mikaela Shiffrin has been dominating World Cup Alpine skiing for months, making her a heavy favorite to collect gold medals at the upcoming Olympics.
MARCO TACCA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Mikaela Shiffrin has been dominating World Cup Alpine skiing for months, making her a heavy favorite to collect gold medals at the upcoming Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States