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Mikaela Shiffrin sets all-time World Cup podium record but lets win slip away

Mikaela Shiffrin sets all-time World Cup podium record but lets win slip away

The Guardian09-03-2025

Mikaela Shiffrin set an all-time World Cup record on Sunday with her 156th podium finish though she let victory slip away in the slalom in Are, Sweden.
Racing through steadily falling snow with a first-run lead, Shiffrin was only 25th-fastest in the second run to finish in third place, 0.19 seconds behind surprise winner Katharina Truppe. Katharina Liensberger placed second, trailing 0.05 behind her Austrian teammate, whose first career World Cup win was earned at the age of 29.
'Katharina Day!' Shiffrin said in the finish area as she hugged the two racers who beat her.
'I actually feel pretty good about it,' Shiffrin said of her fifth slalom race since her comeback from a serious crash in November. 'I maybe wasn't always perfect but I was pushing really hard.'
Shiffrin's 156th top-three finish in her World Cup career broke a tie with Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark. Shiffrin also took the all-time wins record from Stenmark and has 100 victories to his 86.
Truppe has one win from her 181 World Cup starts, though she has three championship medals including the team event gold at the 2022 Beijing Olympics.
'It's just: 'Wow.' I'm a little bit speechless,' said Truppe, who had been sixth-fastest in the morning run, trailing Shiffrin by 0.91. 'First victory, it's crazy. I will enjoy it and soak up all this emotion.'
Shiffrin needed to win on Sunday to earn 100 race points and stay in contention for a ninth career season-long slalom title. She missed four slalom races while recovering from her physical and psychological injuries sustained in November.
'I'm still trying to get the repetition back. I just have to keep practicing it,' she said.
With Olympic slalom champion Petra Vlhova skipping the entire season to recover from a knee injury, the door opened for a new World Cup title winner.
The World Cup season-ending last slalom is at Sun Valley, Idaho, on 27 March with four skiers ahead of Shiffrin and within 100 points of the lead to lift the crystal globe trophy.
Title-chasing contenders Zrinka Ljutic and Camille Rast, the world championships gold medalist last month, were below their best form on Sunday and placed 10th and 11th, respectively.
The 21-year-old Ljutic leads Rast in the slalom standings by 41 points and will win the title with a top-three result at Sun Valley. Liensberger, the 2021 champion, and Rast's Swiss teammate Wendy Holdener could also win.
Shiffrin said she plans to train in Europe before the trip across seven time zones to Idaho.
'There's certainly some travel challenges. It's a really long distance,' she said. 'I guess one more race this season for me but I'm looking forward to it.'

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