Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Bumpy ride on, off slopes

- By Andrew Dampf

MERIBEL, France — One gold. Two silvers. And three gates away from another gold medal that slipped from her grasp in a patch of soft snow.

And that just was what Mikaela Shiffrin accomplish­ed on the slopes at the world championsh­ips.

Off the slopes, the American skier dealt with a protest from environmen­talists who mistakenly thought she was using a helicopter for training — resulting in security being brought in to protect her.

The helicopter flap was followed by an even bigger distractio­n when Shiffrin’s longtime personal coach, Mike Day, left her abruptly in the middle of the worlds after being told that Shiffrin planned to take a new direction with her staff after the season.

All of that during a record-breaking season on the World Cup circuit where her every turn and move has drawn enormous scrutiny.

“It’s been a complete world championsh­ips — every emotion I could feel,” Shiffrin said after earning the silver medal in slalom on Saturday to conclude the women’s events. “I’m really proud when I look back at the last two weeks. And I also have things to learn as well . . . . How I handle situations in life and how I can improve on that.”

Shiffrin’s performanc­e was a vast improvemen­t on how she fared at last year’s Beijing Olympics, where she didn’t win a medal amid enormous expectatio­ns and didn’t finish three of her five races.

“We all know that I’ve experience­d the situation where I have no medals,” Shiffrin said. “So I’m very, very appreciati­ve to be on the silver side of things. Even if it’s not gold, it’s still been such a spectacula­r world championsh­ips and a spectacula­r season.”

Shiffrin won the slalom world title four times from 2013 to 2019 and took the bronze medal two years ago. She became the first skier, male or female, to win six medals in one discipline at the worlds. She also won the slalom at the 2014 Sochi Games for the first of her three career Olympic medals.

In her career at the worlds, Shiffrin improved her remarkable record to 14 medals in 17 races.

She has some time off before resuming her chase of Ingemar Stenmark’s record of 86 World Cup wins next month. Shiffrin broke Lindsey Vonn’s women’s record of 82 wins last month and needs only one more victory to match Stenmark, who raced in the 1970s and 1980s. Races at the worlds don’t count toward World Cup totals.

Shiffrin will skip next weekend’s World Cup races in Crans Montana, Switzerlan­d, and instead head to Norway for some training ahead of races in Kvitfjell on March 3-5; followed by her favored technical races in Sweden — Stenmark’s home nation — the following weekend.

Then the season ends in mid-March with the World Cup finals in Soldeu, Andorra.

“I know I’m close to (Stenmark’s) record, but I think it’s important for everybody to remember that it might not happen this season,” Shiffrin said. “So I don’t take for granted all the success I’ve had so far this season, even this world championsh­ips.

“Now, first, we celebrate the last two weeks tonight, and then we reset, recover and get ready for the final races of the season.”

 ?? JEFF PACHOUD/AFP ?? Mikaela Shiffrin, center, celebrates with teammates on the podium at the FIS Alpine Ski World Championsh­ip on Saturday in Meribel, French Alps.
JEFF PACHOUD/AFP Mikaela Shiffrin, center, celebrates with teammates on the podium at the FIS Alpine Ski World Championsh­ip on Saturday in Meribel, French Alps.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States