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Mikaela Shiffrin powers through tricky course to win the slalom at the World Cup finals

Mikaela Shiffrin powers through tricky course to win the slalom at the World Cup finals

Boston Globe27-03-2025

Mikaela Shiffrin 🇺🇸 bags win no. 101 🏆 in front of her crowd!
— FIS Alpine (@fisalpine)
It was an injury-marred season for Shiffrin, who competed in only the slalom at finals. The 30-year-old Shiffrin has missed four slalom races this season and that's taken her out of retaining her title in the discipline. She still finished in fourth place in the slalom standings.
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Croatian ski racer Zrinka Ljutic was 10th in Thursday's race and captured the season-long slalom title race over Katharina Liensberger of Austria. The 21-year-old Ljutic captured last season's 'rising star' award and is showing that talent ahead of the 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympics. Camille Rast of Switzerland slipped to third in the overall slalom standings.
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A dream come true for Zrinka Ljutic 🇭🇷 – the Slalom Crystal Globe is in your hands! Congrats Zrinka ❤️
📸 Agence Zoom
— FIS Alpine (@fisalpine)
U.S. skier Paula Moltzan had a fast second run Thursday — finishing sixth — two days after a crash in the giant slalom. She wore a bandage on her chin.
American Paula Moltzan was happy with her effort in Thursday's slalom at the FIS Alpine Ski World Cup finals.
Alexis Boichard/Agence Zoom/Getty
For Shiffrin, a painful season drew to a close. She's worked her way back from a serious giant slalom crash in Killington, Vermont, in late November, where she suffered a deep puncture wound that caused severe trauma to her oblique muscles. The crash led to emotional trauma, too, leaving her with post-traumatic stress disorder in the GS.
This season has also included a memorable milestone for Shiffrin when she won her 100th World Cup race during a slalom in Italy on Feb. 23.
On Thursday, Shiffrin picked up World Cup win No. 101. Fittingly, there were kids in the crowd dressed in puppy outfits — a nod to Disney's '101 Dalmatians.'
When she takes the slalom course, any slalom course, Shiffrin's been tough to beat. She's won four of the six World Cup slalom races she's been in this season.
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Over her career, Shiffrin has finished first, second or third in a World Cup slalom race in 89 of 118 starts, which is a 75.4 percent podium rate. She's won 64 times — a 54.2 percent victory rate.

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Reeling U.S. must open Gold Cup with a win: 'It'll help us feel good about ourselves'
Reeling U.S. must open Gold Cup with a win: 'It'll help us feel good about ourselves'

Fox Sports

time2 hours ago

  • Fox Sports

Reeling U.S. must open Gold Cup with a win: 'It'll help us feel good about ourselves'

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Even without the likes of lock starters such as Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie and Antonee Robinson and Tim Weah, members of the U.S. men's national team's shorthanded Concacaf Gold Cup squad believe they can beat the odds and claim the regional championship for the eighth time in program history next month. First, they have to win a soccer game. Coming off four consecutive defeats — the United States men's longest losing streak in 18 years — Mauricio Pochettino's under-strength side heads into its Gold Cup opener on Sunday against Trinidad and Tobago (kickoff at 6 p.m. ET on FOX) desperate to snap the skid. A victory would help the Americans kick off the three-week-long competition — the last tournament for the U.S. before next summer's FIFA World Cup on home soil — on a good foot. Perhaps as important, three points against the Soca Warriors would provide a much-needed boost in morale. "We understand that it can't keep going on like that for much longer," U.S. center back Chris Richards told reporters before the team trained at Stanford University on Saturday. "At some point, we have to just kind of buckle up and start to play better, start to win games. "If we win the first game, that'll set us up for the rest of the tournament," Richards continued. "It'll help us feel good about ourselves. I think it'll definitely give us momentum. But also, I think it'll give everybody around the camp just kind of a breath of fresh air. We're ready for it." They had better be. While the U.S. is the favorite against T&T, no U.S. fan will ever take a contest against the two-island Caribbean nation lightly again — not since that shocking loss in tiny Couva, Trinidad in 2017 that cost the Americans a World Cup trip the following year. If the vibes around the U.S. hit rock bottom then, they've come close to descending to those depths over the last 12 months. Last July, the U.S. became the first Copa América host not to reach knockout play, a failure that cost then-coach Gregg Berhalter his job. Pochettino took over in late 2024 and started well enough, winning five of his first six games. But with Pulisic and the rest of the first-choice regulars in the lineups, the Americans bombed in the Nations League finals in March, suffering embarrassing losses to Panama and Canada. So when the U.S. lost both its pre-Gold Cup friendlies to Türkiye and Switzerland this month, the latter a 4-0 drubbing, alarm bells started ringing. Still, those teams, ranked 20th and 27th in FIFA's world ranking, are stronger that the foes the U.S. will face over the next few weeks. "You always want to challenge yourself against the best players, the best teams," forward Brian White said. "If we can learn from what went wrong, I think we could have a successful tournament." Getting Tyler Adams back would help there. The 2022 World Cup captain is one of the few usual starters in camp this summer, along with Richards and goalkeeper Matt Turner. Adams has been nursing a foot injury in recent days. He didn't dress versus the Swiss, though Pochettino is hoping to have him back soon – and possibly against T&T. "He today was training a little bit," the coach said. "He's close to being available again." With or without Adams, Pochettino feels this set of players is ready for the challenge. "The circumstances are not the same as in March," he said. "In a club, if you play four league games and you lose, it can affect your emotion. But this group is new. It's nothing to do with with March. It's completely different. "We are competing really well," Pochettino added. "The team is really in a very good level." Now they need to prove it. Getting three points on Sunday would be a start. Doug McIntyre is a soccer reporter for FOX Sports who has covered United States men's and women's national teams at FIFA World Cups on five continents. Follow him @ ByDougMcIntyre . recommended Get more from United States Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more

'Nothing in front of me': Will Power won his IndyCar-best pole despite near-2-year drought
'Nothing in front of me': Will Power won his IndyCar-best pole despite near-2-year drought

Indianapolis Star

time2 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

'Nothing in front of me': Will Power won his IndyCar-best pole despite near-2-year drought

MADISON, Ill. — He's been saying as much since preseason media days in January, but Will Power emphatically proved the point Saturday evening: The two-time IndyCar champion and all-time series pole leader still has speed. After a 2024 campaign where the Team Penske driver failed to procure an IndyCar pole for the first time since 2008, Power snapped a 29-race pole-less streak at World Wide Technology Raceway on Saturday to secure his 71st out-front start of his IndyCar career, extending a series record he grabbed three years ago from American racing legend Mario Andretti (67 poles). The pole also marked the 700th pole for Team Penske's global racing program in its 50-plus year history. 'It will be nice to see nothing in front of me for the first time in a while,' Power said with a chuckle in the news conference, flanked by his wife Liz and son Beau sitting off to the side, beaming. 'It has been a while. I mean, I've been on the front row a few times, but it's nice to get a pole always. One (championship) point, and you get to lead the field to green. 'I'm going to enjoy it for an hour or so and then get back to practice.' Saturday's result marks Power's fifth pole at WWTR in IndyCar's 10 events since returning to the track in 2017. He's won once, and not in a race he started from pole, in 2018. He's joined on the front row by the polesitter each of the last two years Team Penske teammate Scott McLaughlin, with the pair's other teammate Josef Newgarden, the winner of four of the last five races at the track, starting fifth. Sitting fifth in the championship entering this weekend with five top-6 results and five times the top Team Penske finisher this season, Power said earlier this week oftentimes the difference between him and his first win this year had been his lack of execution in qualifying and a couple bouts of bad luck. Starting out front in a race where track position means quite a bit will be key, even for a cooler nighttime race Sunday night with better chances of a second lane to work its way in, Power said. 'I really do believe (I have a lot of speed). I feel that,' Power said. 'I've obviously done this for a long time. I know the craft very well, and it's very nice to get pole. Obviously it's just two laps, and you've got to execute in the race. 'I think it's good to be in the top 3 or 4 here. I think once you start falling back, it gets hard to get back up there. Sometimes it's not good to lead and burn that fuel because this is on the cusp of a four-stop race, and you can eliminate one stop (by saving fuel). So it will be interesting to see how that sorta plays out throughout the field.' Though he told IndyStar earlier this week he doesn't expect to know the fate of his future in the sport for some time — his latest multi-year contract with Team Penske ends after this season, and he remains without an extension or a retooled deal for 2026 — Saturday's pole performance only continues to build his case that he's deserving of another deal, Power said, after racking up as many wins and as many podiums as any driver in the field in 2024. 'I'm very good at it': Will Power has unshaken confidence in contract year with Team Penske 'Any time you're P1 in any session, it's just little bits of credit,' Power said. 'One race win would be a huge chunk of credit. You just have to keep doing that. That's just the nature of this series. 'It's very competitive right now. Teams are looking for top-level drivers. It's come down to that: people who can execute week in and week out. You've got to keep putting runs on the board.' Race info: IndyCar Bommarito Automotive Grand Prix near St. Louis qualifying, lineup, time, TV, radio 1. Will Power, 180.329 mph 2. Scott McLaughlin, 179.783 mph 3. Pato O'Ward, 179.190 mph 4. David Malukas, 179.079 mph 5. Josef Newgarden, 178.910 mph 6. Marcus Armstrong, 178.754 mph 7. Felix Rosenqvist, 178.696 mph 8. Colton Herta, 178.511 mph 9. Alex Palou, 178.381 mph 10. Kyle Kirkwood, 178.229 mph 11. Scott Dixon, 178.014 mph 12. Alexander Rossi, 177.996 mph 13. Marcus Ericsson, 177.405 mph 14. Christian Lundgaard, 176.868 mph 15. Conor Daly, 176.807 mph 16. Callum Ilott, 176.758 mph 17. Devlin DeFrancesco, 176.288 mph 18. Rinus VeeKay, 176.224 mph 19. Santino Ferrucci, 175.963 mph 20. Nolan Siegel, 175.779 mph 21. Louis Foster, 174.907 mph 22. Graham Rahal, 174.687 mph 23. Sting Ray Robb, 174.474 mph 24. Robert Shwartzman, 174.265 mph 25. Christian Rasmussen, 174.170 mph 26. Kyffin Simpson, 173.035 mph 27. Jacob Abel, 171.424 mph

Adam Scott turns back the clock and climbs within shot of the lead at U.S. Open
Adam Scott turns back the clock and climbs within shot of the lead at U.S. Open

Hamilton Spectator

time2 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Adam Scott turns back the clock and climbs within shot of the lead at U.S. Open

OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — His hair is speckled with grey. Even if he remains a fan favourite in some circles, when picks to win the U.S. Open were being made, not many included 44-year-old Adam Scott. Once third-round action at Oakmont wrapped up Saturday, though, the list of the top 10 names on the U.S. Open leaderboard was made up of two kinds of players: Those who had never won a major. And Scott, the 2013 Masters champion. On a day that brought back memories of that Sunday, 12 years ago at Augusta, one of Australia's biggest sports stars matched the day's best score with a 3-under 67. He'll enter the final round tied for second at 3 under with J.J. Spaun, one shot behind American Sam Burns, with whom Scott will play alongside Sunday in final pairing. Not bad for the man who came out of Friday's round of 70 and called it 'even-par, old-man golf.' 'It's huge, obviously,' Scott said. 'For sure I'll be nervous but I'm in a great spot. I'm happy to be one behind, not sleeping on the lead and that kind of stuff.' If the only player among the top contenders who harbours memories of what it's like to close on one of golf's biggest stages can pull it off Sunday, he'll become the second-oldest winner of America's national championship, behind Hale Irwin, who was 45 when he won at Medinah in 1990. Setting aside the idea that the U.S. Open and Oakmont are supposed to be the sort of nerve-jangling test that the 40-something set isn't great at, Scott played the final six holes in calm, damp conditions in 3 under. That included a tee shot to inside five feet for birdie on 13, an approach on 14 to a foot for birdie, a 14-footer for another birdie on No. 17 and a two-putt from 55 feet on the 18th hole to close with a par. With a ball speed measured at 187 miles per hour on the 18th tee box, and a drive that travelled 331 yards, some of this looked more like Scott back in 2014, when, partly on the strength of that Masters victory, he passed Tiger Woods to vault to No. 1 in the world ranking. Scott finished second two times last year, including at the BMW Championship in the playoffs, but has not been lighting up the PGA Tour in 2025; he doesn't have a top-10 finish this year. But, he said, things have been trending in the right direction lately. 'I started hitting it better off the tee in the last month, and usually over my career, I've seen that bleed through the rest of the game,' Scott said. 'I've slowly done it. I'm not exactly firing on all cylinders, but it's a nice thing having some confidence coming into tomorrow.' If this were a game of resumes, not driving, chipping and putting, Scott would already have the trophy. This marks the Aussie's 96th straight major — the longest active streak and second-longest of all time only to Jack Nicklaus, who played in 146 straight. This also marks Scott's 97th overall major. The other four players at even or better heading into Sunday — Burns, Spaun, Viktor Hovland and Carlos Ortiz — have combined to play 63. ___ AP golf:

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