USA TODAY International Edition

On top of the world, Shiffrin keeps edge

U. S. skiing star on brink of first Cup overall title

- Roxanna Scott

Coming off her third consecutiv­e world championsh­ip in slalom, U. S. skier Mikaela Shiffrin still hasn’t had time to fully appreciate the records she continues to break.

Her victory in St. Moritz, Switzerlan­d, on Saturday marked the first time in 78 years a woman has won the slalom at three consecutiv­e worlds. She joins Germany’s Christl Cranz ( 1937- 39) as the only women to complete the threepeat in the discipline.

“The three gold medals, it feels more like a label, like a definition,” the 21- year- old from Colorado said Wednesday in a phone interview with USA TODAY Sports. “It doesn’t feel like something that actually happened.”

Shiffrin compared the moment of winning her third slalom gold at worlds to racing to Olympic gold in Sochi in 2014. “The immediate postrace, there’s a ton of media, a lot of answering questions,” she said. “Obviously all of that is important, and it’s great and I was on a total high. But it doesn’t give a lot of time to let that moment sink in because you’re immediatel­y off to do pictures with the medals, this and that. And the whole day is just taken away. By the time I got back to my hotel room, I was like I just want to go to bed.”

She’s continuing to train in Switzerlan­d, where World Cup races will be held this weekend in Crans- Montana. In St. Moritz, Shiffrin also won silver in giant slalom, the best finish by an American woman in the discipline at the world championsh­ips since 1985.

Accolades have been piling up for Shiffrin since she made her World Cup debut in 2011. She’s the youngest woman in U. S. history to win a world championsh­ip and at 18 became the youngest athlete — male or female — to win the slalom Olympic gold.

As Shiffrin closes in on her first World Cup overall title, she says it’s taken some time getting used to being the best skier in the world, not just No. 1 in slalom.

“Technicall­y on paper, that’s what I am,” she said of being overall No. 1. “Of course it feels good to be in this position right now. It definitely gives me hope or an optimistic attitude going into the Olympics. But at the same time, there’s a lot of time between now and then. I’m trying to take everything in stride and not get too amped up. Because it’s really, really easy to get too excited too soon and then not be excited enough when the time actually comes.”

With about a month of racing left in the season, Shiffrin is heavily favored in the World Cup overall race. She’s 180 points ahead of Lara Gut. The Swiss ski- er and 2016 World Cup overall champion tore her left anterior cruciate ligament at the world championsh­ips this month.

Only four Americans have won the World Cup overall title. Lindsey Vonn has won the crystal globe four times, the last one coming in 2012, and Bode Miller has done it twice. Tamara McKinney ( 1983) and Phil Mahre ( 1981, ’ 82, ’ 83) are the other Americans to win the overall.

“All of those names, those are all my idols, my childhood heroes,” said Shiffrin, who grew up skiing in Vail. “To be mentioned alongside them would be incredible, and hopefully it will inspire another generation of racers from the U. S.”

To that end, Shiffrin embraces being a role model and inspiratio­n for young skiers.

“When I get back to the U. S. and I go to those races in Squaw Valley or in Aspen and we see the huge turnout of fans and the entire elementary school comes out to support us … that’s the kind of stuff that inspires me,” she said. “I think it’s just as cool for me to see that as it is for them to see us racing. It reminds me of not long ago when I was that kid who just wanted to catch a glimpse of Bode Miller or Lindsey or Ted ( Ligety).”

After racing in Switzerlan­d, Shiffrin plans to travel to Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, to check out the venues for next year’s Olympics, but she won’t compete there in early March. Then she’s off to Squaw Valley for World Cup races March 10- 11 before the World Cup Finals in Aspen.

 ?? JEAN- CHRISTOPHE BOTT, EPA ?? The USA’s Mikaela Shiffrin clears a pole on a slalom run last weekend en route to victory in the event at the world championsh­ips in St. Moritz, Switzerlan­d.
JEAN- CHRISTOPHE BOTT, EPA The USA’s Mikaela Shiffrin clears a pole on a slalom run last weekend en route to victory in the event at the world championsh­ips in St. Moritz, Switzerlan­d.

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