USA TODAY US Edition

Shiffrin ready to hit slopes again

Defending overall champion focused on season

- Nancy Armour

CHICAGO – Mikaela Shiffrin got more than a couple of medals at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics.

She got a dose of perspectiv­e that might make her even more formidable in the future.

Shiffrin is notorious for her preparatio­n and perfection­ism. It’s part of what makes her one of the best technical skiers her sport has ever seen, winner of five of the last six slalom season titles as well as the last two overall crowns.

But things don’t always go according to plan. Like, say, when blustery winds delay races for days and wreak havoc with an already compressed schedule.

While her competitor­s were able to roll with the uncertaint­ies in Pyeongchan­g, Shiffrin acknowledg­es she got worked up by them. She threw up before her first slalom run and came out of the gate tentative, winding up fourth in her signature event.

Fourth place at the Olympics is hardly something to apologize for, and Shiffrin still came home with two medals, a gold in the giant slalom and a silver in the combined. Add her slalom gold from the Sochi Games and she’s just the fourth American skier with three or more Olympic medals, and the youngest to accomplish the feat.

Yet Shiffrin knows she let herself be beaten in Pyeongchan­g by the only person who can: herself.

“I look back with fond memories, but I also kind of cringe because I just felt like I was nervous the entire time I was there. That’s something I’m trying to realize and really accept, the fact that there are some things that are out of my control,” she said during a trip in September for work with some sponsors.

“Watching some of my competitor­s and how they handled the weather delays and whatnot and somehow gained energy out of it because they were just like, ‘Oh, it’s the Olympics. This is fun. My work is done, I’m here to just race now,’ ” she added. “I was like, ‘I need to train, I need to get this stuff done, I need to make sure all my ducks are in order.’

“At the end of the day, in the slalom, it still didn’t help.”

When Shiffrin thinks back to Pyeongchan­g, some of her favorite memories are the time she spent with her dad, brother and her brother’s girlfriend — time she wouldn’t have had if the schedule hadn’t been upended.

“That was a really nice, bring me back down to the earth, those moments. I really enjoyed that,” she said. “So I have actually looked back at South Korea not even for the medals or whatever disappoint­ment I may have felt, but more for those moments that made me feel I’m OK, everything’s fine.”

It’s a feeling she’s trying to hold onto as she begins this season with this weekend’s giant slalom race in Soelden, Austria.

Shiffrin is always going to be a stickler for preparatio­n and training. That’s just who she is. She also knows adding more speed events to her schedule will bring additional stress because it means memorizing new courses and finding her way around new venues.

And then there is the spotlight, which will focus even more intensely on the 23-year-old now that Bode Miller has retired and Lindsey Vonn has announced this will be her last season.

“I’m probably never going to give up that mind-set that I have to make sure I’m trained, make sure that I’m prepared,” Shiffrin said. “But I’m finding a way to enjoy it a little bit more.”

She mentions the two-week vacation she and boyfriend Mathieu Faivre took this spring, a time that she might normally otherwise spent hunkered down in the gym. Also on the trip was Tessa Worley, a teammate of Favire’s on the French squad who just happens to be one of Shiffrin’s biggest competitor­s.

And it was fine. More than fine, in fact.

“That was really nice for me to see,” Shiffrin said. “It was eye-opening, in a way. Just realizing that (you) can be competitor­s … but you can be friends. You can be friendly.

“I very much have been very focused, intense, I-have-to-get-myself-in-aspecific-mind-set-in-order-to-perform. And sometimes it feels like it’s going against who I am as a person because I tend to just want to be happy.”

And therein lies the lesson from Pyeongchan­g. You can prepare for everything. Sometimes, though, the best preparatio­n is simply realizing you’re just going to have to let it all ride.

 ?? KEVIN JAIRAJ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Mikaela Shiffrin, winner of five of the last six slalom season titles, begins a new skiing season this weekend in Austria.
KEVIN JAIRAJ/USA TODAY SPORTS Mikaela Shiffrin, winner of five of the last six slalom season titles, begins a new skiing season this weekend in Austria.

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