San Francisco Chronicle

Shiffrin denied gold in her best event

- By Pat Graham Pat Graham is an Associated Press writer.

Frida Hansdotter held off the conservati­ve-skiing Mikaela Shiffrin and the rest of a tightly bunched field to win the Olympic slalom title Friday at the Pyeongchan­g Games.

In second after the opening run, the Swedish skier powered through the sunsplashe­d course on her final charge to finish in a combined time of 1 minute, 38.63 seconds. First-run leader Wendy Holdener of Switzerlan­d was second and Katharina Gallhuber of Austria earned a surprise bronze.

Another surprise: Shiffrin finishing fourth. The American standout won the Olympic slalom title four years ago in Sochi when she was 18. She has also won seven of her past 10 World Cup races and three straight world championsh­ip titles.

Holdener fully expected to come down and see Shiffrin leading.

She wasn’t. It was Hansdotter.

“A lot of surprises today,” Holdener said. “Mikaela skis that good. She will do it another time.”

Shiffrin was at a loss to describe what happened and why she wasn’t attacking the course more.

“I’ve been skiing aggressive­ly in slalom all season long. I’ve been confident, comfortabl­e,” Shiffrin said. “Coming here and skiing the way I did, really conservati­ve, was a huge disappoint­ment . ... That’s how life goes.”

On her final run, Shiffrin didn’t have her usual charge. Before her first run, she dealt with something else — something resembling nerves.

Shiffrin, who won the giant slalom the day before, was asked in an NBC interview about throwing up before stepping into the starting gate to start her slalom run.

“That was kind of sudden. It almost felt like a virus,” Shiffrin said, laughing. “Kind of puking, less about nerves. But we’ll see.”

Upon further reflection, it wasn’t a virus.

“It might’ve been a little bit of me trying to make an excuse,” Shiffrin said. “Sometimes I feel the only one who can beat myself in slalom is me. I beat myself . ... So it’s a really big bummer. I’ll learn.”

Hansdotter became the second Swedish woman to capture an Olympic gold in the discipline, joining Anja Paerson, who won the event at the 2006 Turin Games.

There were seven racers within a second of Holdener’s first-run time, with Hansdotter 0.20 seconds back. Gallhuber started her final run trailing by 1.23 seconds — a sizable gap to make up.

“Unbelievab­le that it happened,” said the 20-year-old Gallhuber, whose best finish in a World Cup race was fifth last month. “I’m speechless. I can’t believe.”

Shiffrin said she was a little drained after all the interviews and other commitment­s that followed her win in the giant slalom on Thursday. The medal ceremony didn’t start until about 8 p.m., and she didn’t get to bed until 10 p.m., which is very late for her these days.

“It was certainly not normal preparatio­n, but I also knew going into these Olympics that it’s not normal races, it’s not normal preparatio­n, so I have to be prepared for anything,” Shiffrin said. “I don’t think that, in and of itself, had a huge impact on my first run today.”

On Saturday, Lindsey Vonn will make her Pyeongchan­g Games debut in the super-G at the speed course in Jeongseon. Vonn missed the Sochi Games with a knee injury.

Vonn said on her Twitter account Friday: “Getting amped up! One day to go!!!”

Shiffrin will skip the super-G race.

 ?? Roberto Schmidt / AFP / Getty Images ?? American skier Mikaela Shiffrin reacts after falling short of a medal in the slalom, which was won by Frida Hansdotter of Sweden (right), at the Jeongseon Alpine Center. Before her first run, Shiffrin threw up before stepping into the starting gate.
Roberto Schmidt / AFP / Getty Images American skier Mikaela Shiffrin reacts after falling short of a medal in the slalom, which was won by Frida Hansdotter of Sweden (right), at the Jeongseon Alpine Center. Before her first run, Shiffrin threw up before stepping into the starting gate.
 ?? Getty Images ??
Getty Images

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