Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Shiffrin envisions a busy schedule

- By Pat Graham

By the end of last season, Mikaela Shiffrin was so drained she couldn’t possibly imagine racing in that many events ever again.

Right up until this season, that is.

The two-time World Cup overall champion now envisions an even more frenzied pace. From downhill to superG, from giant slalom to an array of slaloms along with the occasional combined, just sign her up.

Sure, she will take the occasional break to sharpen her technical skills or get some rest, but really there’s no slowing her down these days. In an era of specializa­tion, the 23-year-old from Avon, Colorado, keeps branching out and has become the rare six-event racer — even if her peers wonder if she can keep it up.

“It’s a challenge right now I’m willing and excited to take on,” said Shiffrin , who will be a favorite in both the giant slalom and slalom races during a World Cup stop this weekend in Killington, Vermont. “That’s also part of the deal — you have to be excited and motivated in the sport. That’s one of the things keeping me motivated.”

See, Shiffrin knows her winning formula doesn’t necessaril­y involve speed events. Case in point: Take away her results from downhill and super-G last season and she still wins the overall by 293 points over Wendy Holdener of Switzerlan­d. That’s how dialed in Shiffrin’s been at the slalom and the GS.

But she has a craving for more speed. The only hitch is each speed training session takes just a fraction away from her rhythm for the technical events, which might not be noticeable to anyone but her.

“Every day that I train downhill or super-G I’m thinking, ‘That might just be one little millimeter of my quick twitch muscles going asleep for a little while,’” said Shiffrin, who won the slalom in Levi, Finland, last weekend and received a reindeer as a prize. “And then I’m always thinking, ‘When am I going to get my slalom training in?’

“There’s just a certain amount of preparatio­n I need for every event.”

The specializa­tion route has worked wonders for Austria’s Marcel Hirscher, who has captured seven straight overall World Cup titles. Hirscher dominates the slalom and GS so much, winning both discipline­s last season, that it’s hard to dethrone him. He was on the podium

16 times in 20 races — none in speed events. Shiffrin was on the podium 18 times in

26 races — with one downhill win and two more thirdplace finishes.

“Is it more challengin­g racing (all the events)? You bet,” U.S. women’s assistant coach Karin Harjo said. “There are only so many hours in a week and days in a year to really prepare at the highest level.”

Especially for the downhill, where it’s typically a four-day commitment given all the training runs.

“It’s a difficult task,” U.S. racer Ted Ligety said. “But when you have people like Mikaela that have a good enough buffer in the slalom, they don’t necessaril­y train as much in that area to stay on top. But if she does compete in this many events full-time, it will probably wear on her after a little bit. It’s the reality of the time allocation to race that many races a year versus taking some of those downhill races off a year.”

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