Los Angeles Times

AT FULL TILT

Ted Ligety has dazzled on the World Cup circuit and has taken his skill in the giant slalom — a test of grace, speed and technique — to a new level

- By Chris Dufresne

The new face of the U.S. men’s Alpine team has never skied “wasted,” a la Bode Miller, but he has skied feeling sicker than a dog.

The face, in fact, could have used a box of tissues as he sniff led through an interview last November at training camp in Colorado. Ted Ligety had a cold. “Not just a little bit of a cold,” he said.

In his sport, the snow must go on.

“It’s just such a big part of ski racing, I’ve raced sick so many times,” he said. “It’s not really a big deal. You just deal with it.”

In 2006, he had flu before a super combined race at a pretty big internatio­nal event in the Italian Alps — it was called the Olympics.

Shivering and feverish, Ligety shocked everyone by stealing the gold medal from teammate Miller and Austrian star Benni Raich.

At a race last year, Ligety needed a hospital visit and an IV just to make it to the starting gate — and finished fourth.

“A lot of racers have some of their best days when they’re sick,” Ligety said.

Watch out, Sochi, if next month Ligety turns up

‘I would say that of all the skiers in all the discipline­s, he stands out the most in his discipline.’

— STEVE PORINO, former U.S. team racer, on Ted Ligety, above, whose specialty is giant slalom

sicker than a Siberian husky.

Illness, he said, can narrow one’s focus.

“You don’t waste energy on all the other frivolous stuff going on around you,” he said. “You have to take so much mental energy to get yourself going you take more risks and push yourself harder because you know that’s the only chance you have.”

It wasn’t long after that interview that Ligety started appearing in commercial­s for a nighttime (and daytime) cold medicine.

Despite his out-of-nowhere gold medal in 2006, at age 21, Ligety did not displace Miller as centerpiec­e of the men’s Alpine team.

Miller overcame his 0-for-Italy performanc­e because he has a soap operatic stage-presence advantage over Ligety and, at any given time, is also the world’s best ski racer.

Miller rebounded four years later in Vancouver, Canada, with Olympic gold, silver and bronze, while Ligety failed to medal.

It took until last year for the official takeover. With Miller sidelined all season after knee surgery, Ligety shredded the Alpine World Cup circuit.

He took his specialty, giant slalom, to another level. He won six of eight possible World Cup races, some by ridiculous margins. He claimed a GS race in Soelden, Austria, by 2.75 seconds, which is like lapping the field in the mile run.

At the world championsh­ips in Austria, Ligety became the first skier since Jean-Claude Killy in 1968 to win three gold medals.

Ligety enters Sochi as a prohibitiv­e favorite in the GS. His dominance is close to jaw-dropping. Nineteen of his 20 career World Cup wins are in his signature event.

“I would say that of all the skiers in all the discipline­s, he stands out the most in his discipline,” former U.S. ski team racer Steve Porino, now an analyst for NBC, said.

“It’s high art, in that other people can watch it, other people can understand it, other people can reason through it, but just can’t do it.”

Giant slalom is considered the purest discipline, a combinatio­n of speed, grace and technique.

“You just can’t be a great athlete, you can’t just be big and strong, you can’t just be ridiculous­ly quick,” Porino explained. “You really have to have it all. It’s the art of skiing, and the hardest to harness.”

It is difficult to convey to casual observers what makes Ligety tick. Simply put, Porino said, he can carve more arc between gates. The discipline is a perfect fit for his natural turn cadence. He slides less than his competitor­s and makes up more time.

Ligety grew up on the slopes of Park City, Utah, developed his technique in 2005 and mastered it long before the competitio­n began trying.

Knowing the competitio­n gap will eventually tighten, Ligety is looking to clean up precious medals while he can.

He will not correlate his breakout success last year with Miller’s absence on tour.

“I wouldn’t say it affected my racing one way or another,” Ligety said.

The skiers, as personalit­ies, are as opposite as bookends.

Ligety said he welcomes Miller’s return to the circuit, and the Olympics, this year.

“Everyone wants to talk about Bode, which is fine,” Ligety said. “He’s an intriguing person.”

But isn’t this now Ligety’s team?

“I think any time Bode’s around, he’s the star,” Ligety said. “He’s done a lot more than I have in the sport, for sure. I’m still a long way off from his career achievemen­ts. He is an extremely interestin­g story and an extremely interestin­g personalit­y. I’m perfectly fine with that.”

Miller, who at 34 has a five-year life advantage, admires Ligety but still acts like the older sibling who refuses to let his kid brother win in checkers.

Only Miller, in his inimitable way, could pay Ligety a genuine compliment by saying, “He has no one to blame for his success except himself.”

In Bode’s world that means Li- gety invented his own style of skiing (as Bode did) and stuck to it (as Bode did).

“I think he really loves that he’s a much better GS skier than I am right now,” Miller joked. “At the same time, I think he feels the pressure still, because he sees the way I ski and he knows. ... ”

Ligety knows too that the Olympics are a one-trick crapshoot.

His 2006 Olympic win took an extraordin­ary set of circumstan­ces. Miller won the downhill portion of the combined and basically had to stand up in two runs of slalom to secure the gold. But Miller missed a gate and was disqualifi­ed.

It then became Raich’s race to lose, and he lost it with a DQ.

Ligety, coughing and wheezing, became only the fourth American male to win gold in Alpine.

The crapshoot turned on Ligety four years ago when he finished ninth in the Olympic GS race he was expected to win.

Ski racers notoriousl­y couch Olympic expectatio­ns because they know their fates are often tied to the ski gods of weather, snow conditions, bib draws and course setup.

In fact, pre-race Olympic favorites have historical­ly foundered.

Winning a World Cup event “globe” is much more indicative of a skier’s place in the sport because, Ligety says, “It’s a compilatio­n of your entire season. You have to be good in a bunch of events throughout the entire year.”

That said, a gold in combined, which is sort of a concocted Olympic event, is different from gold in giant slalom.

If Ligety is the king of GS, which he is, doesn’t he need that crowning Olympic achievemen­t?

“Obviously, the expectatio­ns are a lot higher this time around, but I think I’m in a much better place, my skiing, but also mentally,” Ligety said.

After his performanc­e at last year’s world championsh­ips, though, people now expect the world of Ligety.

 ?? Alexis Boichard Agence Zoom/getty Images ?? TED LIGETY, who won a gold medal for the U.S. in 2006, whisks along a course at a World Cup stop in Alta Badia, Italy, in December.
Alexis Boichard Agence Zoom/getty Images TED LIGETY, who won a gold medal for the U.S. in 2006, whisks along a course at a World Cup stop in Alta Badia, Italy, in December.
 ?? Peter Schneider
EPA ??
Peter Schneider EPA
 ?? Doug Pensinger Getty Images ?? “I THINK he really loves that he’s a much better [giant slalom] skier than I am right now,” U.S. star Bode Miller, left, says of Ligety. They’re shown at a competitio­n last month.
Doug Pensinger Getty Images “I THINK he really loves that he’s a much better [giant slalom] skier than I am right now,” U.S. star Bode Miller, left, says of Ligety. They’re shown at a competitio­n last month.

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