USA TODAY International Edition

Record matters less to Shiffrin than how she got it

- Nancy Armour

The best part of Mikaela Shiffrin becoming the winningest skier of all time is that she is the person who cares least about the accomplish­ment.

She is astounded by her 87 World Cup victories, of course, and humbled to be in the same company as Ingemar Stenmark, Lindsey Vonn and some of the other names below her on the list. She’s overwhelme­d so many people, including athletes she admires from other sports, became invested in her pursuit of Stenmark’s decades- old record.

But the record doesn’t matter nearly as much as the work behind it. The number of wins pales in importance to what she did and how she felt right up until she crossed the finish line.

“When I was in the start gate, both runs, I was so hyped up to ski fast. I was just like, ‘ I want to race this. Not for 87, just because I want to race this,’ ” Shiffrin said Saturday after winning her 87th World Cup title, a slalom in Are, Sweden.

“I’ve been talking this entire time about how I don’t like the emphasis on the numbers and I can’t really tell you what the number means because it was not my main priority or focus and … I was just like, I guess we’ll find out if I’ve been honest with myself this whole time,” she said. “To get 86 yesterday and come out there today and still race with the same nerves and anticipati­on, that was one of the coolest things I’ve ever experience­d.”

We love sports for the possibilit­ies they offer. The transcende­nt moments that produce championsh­ips and titles. The singular performanc­es that make you marvel at what the human body and spirit can produce. Even a mere mortal’s satisfacti­on in knowing the hard work today can always be surpassed tomorrow.

But sports get tainted when we get too caught up in the end result, and we’ve seen too much of that darker side lately. Alabama was set to play for the title in the SEC men’s basketball tournament Sunday because a coach put his team’s record above doing the right thing. Tiger Woods, enabled the better part of his life because of his otherworld­ly talent, continues to reveal himself as far less of a human being. The NFL repeatedly demeans women. FIFA turns a blind eye to human rights abuses so long as the check is big enough.

Shiffrin is the antidote to that. She recognizes victories are meant to be earned. She handles her failures with the same grace as her successes.

Above all, she does not mistake what she does for who she is.

Shiffrin has always been someone who has enjoyed the process more than the prizes. When she says she wants to be “the best,” she means her best. She will nitpick to death any flaw or deficiency until it is gone, and practice what she does well until it’s even better. She loves the grind of honing her craft, and relishes testing that training against the adrenaline and unpredicta­ble conditions of a race.

The wins and the records are simply a byproduct of all that.

“The motivation has never been about this, about the record, about these numbers. It comes before that. It’s the turns I make before I win the race,” Shiffrin said. “That was the feeling I wanted to have, yesterday both runs and today both runs. That’s the most special thing I could feel, and it happens even before you cross the finish.”

That’s why the Beijing Olympics were so frustratin­g.

Not winning any medals – that was someone else’s disappoint­ment. What was crushing for Shiffrin was not being able to carry over what she’d been doing in training. She could no longer trust her work and, worse, she didn’t know why or how to fix it.

The way she handled that, answering every question after every race, was a lesson in both character and perseveran­ce.

But so, too, is the way she’s rebounded this season.

Shiffrin has been in a fishbowl these last few months as she got closer first to Vonn and then to Stenmark. Whenever she was asked about her pursuit of the all- time wins record, however, she’d talk of doing things the right way, of keeping her focus on her skiing.

Anything less would be both a disservice to herself and a disrespect to the record and all those who’ve played a part in it.

“It’s hard to win, whether it’s one time or it’s 87 times,” Shiffrin said. “Even today. I had nothing left to accomplish and I still had this feeling, this adrenaline, anticipati­on of what might happen. That’s what we do it for. That’s what we live for, that’s why we race.

“It’s hard to feel that and still make it happen. Whether it’s once or 87 times, it doesn’t matter,” she added. “It’s special to be part of it.”

It will be decades, if ever, before another skier gets close to Shiffrin’s record. Remarkable as that is, the even greater achievemen­t is that she’s done it the right way, staying true to herself and reminding us what sports are really all about.

 ?? ALESSANDRO TROVATI/ AP ?? Mikaela Shiffrin is all smiles after earning her record- breaking 87th World Cup win in Are, Sweden, on Saturday.
ALESSANDRO TROVATI/ AP Mikaela Shiffrin is all smiles after earning her record- breaking 87th World Cup win in Are, Sweden, on Saturday.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States