Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Icon Stenmark says Shiffrin ‘much better’

American skier breaks his record with slalom win

- By Andrew Dampf

To Ingemar Stenmark, all this fuss over Mikaela Shiffrin as she approached — and then passed — his record of 86 World Cup skiing victories was beside the point.

Because the 66-year-old Swede believes the American is already on another level.

“She’s much better than I was. You cannot compare,” Stenmark said in an interview with The Associated Press. “She has everything. She has good physical strength, she has a good technique, strong head. I think it’s the combinatio­n of everything makes her so good. And I’m also impressed that she can ski good both in slalom and in superG and downhill also.

“I could never have been so good in all discipline­s.”

While all 86 of Stenmark’s wins in the 1970s and ’80s came in the technical discipline­s of slalom (40) and giant slalom (46), Shiffrin’s wins have been spread out amid both her specialtie­s of slalom and giant slalom and also in the higher-speed and more dangerous events of super-G and downhill.

One of Shiffrin’s three medals at the world championsh­ips last month came in super-G with a silver.

Stenmark knows the numbers well, because he enjoys following Shiffrin’s races.

“I watch most of them,” he said via phone in late February from his home just outside Stockholm. “To become such a good skier you have to love skiing, and she has good touch with the snow, good feeling. She can adapt to all kind of different snow conditions.”

Shiffrinbr­oke Stenmark’s mark with her 87th victory Saturday in a World Cup slalom race in Are, Sweden, a day after tying the record with a win in a giant slalom.

“Pretty hard to comprehend,” said Shiffrin, who crouched and rested her head on her knees after finishing the final run. Runnerup Wendy Holdener of Switzerlan­d and third-place home favorite Anna Swenn Larsson came over to congratula­te her.

Saturday’s result marked the American’s sixth slalom win of the season and the record-extending 53rd career win in the discipline.

“It’s pretty hard to describe — and it’s not over yet, which is even more ridiculous,” said Shiffrin, who turns 28 Monday and is expected to continue until at the least the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy.

Shiffrin won her first World Cup race in Are in December 2012, claimed two gold medals at the Swedish resort at the 2019 worlds and now has seven victories there in all.

“I heard she likes Sweden, but maybe she likes Norway more now, because she has a Norwegian boyfriend,” Stenmark said, referring to Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, the circuit’s leading downhill skier, who Shiffrin has had a relationsh­ip with for several years.

While Stenmark hasn’t attended a race since Lindsey Vonn invited him to her career finale in Are in 2019, he’s drawn to Shiffrin’s methodical approach to skiing and — as someone known for his reservedne­ss — appreciate­s her introverte­d personalit­y.

“I don’t know her personally, but she seems to be a very (nice) person,” Stenmark said.

Shiffrin shows just as much reverence for Stenmark as he does for her.

“I would say the name means more than the number,” the 27-year-old Shiffrin said of Stenmark. “He’s an absolute legend in skiing. And no matter what I achieve, this kind of term, ‘the greatest of all time’ or the numbers — all that for me, it’s something that’s debatable.

“The thing for me about sports is that it gives people a reason to be inspired by whoever they choose to be inspired (by),” Shiffrin added. “So whatever I do, it’s a little bit of a moot point. And that’s how I feel about Ingemar. His name is in history as a legend of the sport that people will remember forever.”

Stenmark, who won his final race in February 1989 in Aspen, Colo., has a long history with American skiers, having been rivals of the Mahre brothers — Phil and Steve — during his racing days. Then Vonn approached his record before injuries cut her career short and left her with 83 wins.

“It’s not a very big sport in the U.S. if you compare it to

American football and baseball and the other (sports). But there are lots of good skiers,” Stenmark said. Stenmark and Shiffrin competed in vastly different eras, with many more races — plus more discipline­s — available to Shiffrin now. There have also been huge advancemen­ts in skiing equipment since Stenmark stopped racing. “It’s all completely different, but I liked the way it was when I was racing. The only

thing I miss is the carving skis,” he said, referring to the newer, hour-glass shaped skis that make turning less challengin­g. “I think skiing nowadays is easier than when we were racing, but winning is maybe harder now, because there are so many (top) skiers. If you make one small mistake, it’s hard to win.”

While Shiffrin has had her fair share of mistakes — see her performanc­e at last year’s Beijing Olympics when she didn’t finish three of her five individual races and didn’t win a medal despite enormous expectatio­ns — she still wins a whopping 35% of her races.

“And I think she can win more than 100,” Stenmark said. “It depends on how many years she continues. But for sure 100.”

 ?? ??
 ?? Getty Images & Associated Press photos ?? With a slalom victory Saturday in Are, Sweden, Mikael Shiffrin, left, won her 87th World Cup race, surpassing Ingemar Stenmark’s record of 86 — a rnumber once thought to be impossible to break.
Getty Images & Associated Press photos With a slalom victory Saturday in Are, Sweden, Mikael Shiffrin, left, won her 87th World Cup race, surpassing Ingemar Stenmark’s record of 86 — a rnumber once thought to be impossible to break.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States