Santa Fe New Mexican

All eyes will be on Shiffrin, unknown hill

Champion hopes to enter all 5 individual Alpine skiing races and add to her career total of three Winter Games medals

- By Howard Fendrich

After her first Winter Games triumph as a teenager in 2014, Mikaela Shiffrin gushed about “dreaming of the next Olympics [and] winning five gold medals” — which not only didn’t happen, of course, but wasn’t even possible because the American ended up not competing in every Alpine event four years later.

Now a veteran of 26, and well-establishe­d as the world’s top all-around ski racer, Shiffrin aims to be in the starting gate at the Beijing Olympics for the slalom, giant slalom, super-G, downhill and combined, along with maybe even the mixed team parallel, according to her coach.

She knows, though, that just entering everything will be a challenge in itself, let alone claiming a haul of medals to add to the two golds and one silver she has from past Olympics, which go along with a half-dozen world championsh­ip golds and a trio of World Cup overall titles.

“I have to do a lot more preparatio­n, like, mentally — just understand­ing how that is going to affect me mentally and physically throughout, essentiall­y, the three weeks that we’re there,” said Shiffrin, the 2014 Olympic champion in slalom and 2018 champ in giant slalom.

“So it definitely takes a lot of my focus to think: What are the boxes we have to check even totally outside of, like, skiing and technique and tactics and the physical side of things?” she said. “What are the boxes we need to check to make sure that I have some comfort level staying in a place that I’ve never been before for three weeks and dealing with the jet lag and getting over that as fast as possible?”

Shiffrin, who is from Colorado, frequently talks about what it will take to avoid feeling uncomforta­ble on, or even between, race days.

There is a lot wrapped up in that area as she heads to her third Olympics, from the back spasms that limited her preparatio­n in November, to the bout with COVID-19 she experience­d in late December, to her first “did not finish” in a slalom in four years that came in January, to the many stress factors she sounds at ease discussing and dissecting.

“If we’re doing our jobs, we shouldn’t have to do anything special for her to feel right and for her to feel comfortabl­e,” said Shiffrin’s coach, Mike Day. “Everything that we can control, we’re controllin­g, and trying to stay ahead of every little thing, whether it’s making sure she’s not walking up too many stairs, whether it’s making sure there are not too many steps in a day, making sure there’s a nutrition option that’s convenient and handy or that she can eat in her room if the dining room is too crowded. Or just another stressor. Truthfully, you don’t want to suddenly get to the Olympics and change what you’re doing, right?”

There’s more, too, that comes with any Winter Games, of course, but will be of particular concern at these, including a new and unseen course that no elite racer will try until Feb. 3, just three days before the men’s downhill begins the Alpine schedule.

There’s also the ever-present element of COVID-19 and all of the unusual arrangemen­ts and uncertaint­ies that brings.

“It’s going to be a mess,” U.S. racer Travis Ganong said, “but we’ll figure it out.”

 ?? PIER MARCO TACCA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The United States’ Mikaela Shiffrin competes Jan. 9 during the first run of an alpine ski, World Cup women’s slalom in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia.
PIER MARCO TACCA ASSOCIATED PRESS The United States’ Mikaela Shiffrin competes Jan. 9 during the first run of an alpine ski, World Cup women’s slalom in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia.

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