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Mikaela Shiffrin says she overcame fear to earn 100th World Cup victory
Mikaela Shiffrin says she overcame fear to earn 100th World Cup victory

Yahoo

time25-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Mikaela Shiffrin says she overcame fear to earn 100th World Cup victory

Mikaela Shiffrin says winning her 100th World Cup race has helped her cope with fear after a recent stressful and traumatic injury. "I'm going to be honest with you. I didn't really see myself achieving this milestone this year either," Shiffrin said Tuesday on "Good Morning America" in a live interview. "So, it's pretty overwhelming." Shiffrin, 29, took home her 100th World Cup victory in the slalom in Sestriere, Italy, on Feb. 23. Her victory came less than three months after she crashed during a giant slalom race in Killington, Vermont, where she was also going for her 100th World Cup win. Simone Biles tweets support to Mikaela Shiffrin after she exits 2nd Olympics event Shiffrin sustained a deep puncture to her abdomen during the Nov. 30, crash, which also tore her oblique muscle, according to ESPN. The injuries required Shiffrin to undergo surgery and endure a weeks-long recovery at home in Colorado. Shiffrin told "GMA" that the injuries also left her with mental obstacles that she's working to overcome in her recovery. "Honestly, I've been struggling with this sort of, like, this kind of PTSD -- I guess you can call it fear, but it's not this sort of like cognitive awareness of fear. It's like my body is aware of the risk," she said. "When my mind says, 'Go,' my body won't. And that on top of everything else, and trying to get the training and the repetition and just to prepare for racing, has been, like I said, overwhelming." Shiffrin added that her 100th World Cup victory is one she hopes will not just be another record for her, but a motivation to continue racing and to have fun. 1-on-1 with Mikaela Shiffrin "The 100th victory was in a slalom and that's always come a little bit more naturally to me," she said. "And I'm hoping that having this exposure to racing in slalom ... is going to help me kind of build up the, I don't know, the fun, and the the ability to take on that risk again and hopefully enjoy it." In honor of her 100th victory, Shiffrin is working with the Share Winter Foundation, a nonprofit organization that works to give more young people access to winter sports, to raise $100,000 for ski and snowboard programs. "Ski racing is a niche sort of sport, and there's a lot of people out there, there's a lot of youth, that [are] really denied access to it," she said, adding, "This collaboration is to raise $100,000 for Shared Winter to help in this goal, this dream of sharing winter with more people and more youth that would be denied access otherwise." The Walt Disney Co. is the parent company of ABC News and ESPN. Mikaela Shiffrin says she overcame fear to earn 100th World Cup victory originally appeared on

Mikaela Shiffrin earns 100th World Cup win, joins exclusive century club
Mikaela Shiffrin earns 100th World Cup win, joins exclusive century club

Yahoo

time23-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Mikaela Shiffrin earns 100th World Cup win, joins exclusive century club

Mikaela Shiffrin has earned a record-extending 100th career Alpine skiing World Cup win, coming back from major injury to join a short list of athletes across all winter sports with triple-digit victories. Shiffrin won a slalom by 61 hundredths of a second over Croatian Zrinka Ljutic combining times from two runs in Sestriere, Italy, on Sunday. Minnesotan Paula Moltzan took third. It's the third time of Shiffrin's record-tying 155 career Alpine World Cup podiums that she's joined by another American. Shiffrin crossed the finish line and took multiple glances in the direction of a scoreboard before dropping down and lying on the snow. Moltzan helped her up, and they hugged. ALPINE SKIING: Full Results | Broadcast Schedule After a podium ceremony, a 60-second highlight video was shown of Shiffrin's celebrations and victory interview clips over her career. An interviewer then said, "After all you've been through these last months, 100 World Cup victories." Shiffrin, through tears, thanked her. "Everybody's been so nice and so supportive," she said. "All of my teammates and competitors and coaches in the whole World Cup. I'm so grateful, thank you, and the fans, thank you so much." Shiffrin returned to the top in her sixth race back since missing two months following a Nov. 30 race crash. She sustained a puncture wound that tore oblique muscles and came very close to piercing organs. Shiffrin had been bidding for win No. 100 in that Nov. 30 giant slalom, leading after the first run before crashing in the second run. Shiffrin returned to competition Jan. 30 and placed 10th and fifth in her first two slaloms back (plus won the World Championships team combined with Breezy Johnson with the third-fastest slalom run). She skipped the giant slalom at the World Championships, citing mental obstacles specific to GS coming back from the Nov. 30 crash. She returned to GS racing in Sestriere on Friday and Saturday. "I do not yet feel entirely myself…but I do feel enough of myself to be here…and for now, that is enough," she posted before her first GS races back. On Friday, she placed 25th. On Saturday, she was 33rd in the opening GS run, not qualifying for the 30-skier second run for the first time since 2012 (when she was 17 years old, two months before her first World Cup win). She then trained slalom. Then on Sunday, she had the fastest opening slalom run by nine hundredths over Ljutic. She was fourth-fastest in the second run skiing on battered snow as the 30th and final starter. "I think it's pretty special to share it with Paula, my teammate," she said. "I could hear everybody cheering from the start when she went, and I thought, OK, just like a day of training. It's like, we just keep pushing, and she pushes, and I push, and I made it achievable." Shiffrin is commemorating No. 100 by partnering with Share Winter Foundation to raise $100,000 for learn to ski and snowboard programs for youth who otherwise would not have access to the sports. 'I know that not everyone is blessed with the good fortune I have come across; in fact, very few are, and over the years, the lack of accessibility for a diverse group of people in winter sports has funneled us into a very not diverse community,' Shiffrin said in a press release. 'I see this 100 victory conversation as an opportunity to bring more eyes and, ideally, more passion to the sport. It's incredible, of course, but I'd like to turn the spotlight to something bigger than me. 'Helping Share Winter bring more kids to the mountain is really meaningful. It's far bigger than me winning 100 races. This will make that 100th victory one of the most meaningful to me." Over the last 12 years, Shiffrin has dealt with a range of hardships, both physical and mental, and returned to the top of podiums each time. In March 2023, she broke Swede Ingemar Stenmark's Alpine record of 86 World Cup wins. Now she has reached a 100-victory milestone that few athletes have achieved across all winter sports World Cups. Norwegian cross-country skier Marit Bjørgen won 114 individual World Cup races before retiring in 2018 with a record 15 Winter Olympic medals. Swiss skier Conny Kissling won 106 times in the 1980s and early 1990s, with most of the victories coming in an event combining moguls and aerials (which, separately, are Olympic disciplines) and acro or ballet (which is not an Olympic discipline). Swiss Amelie Wagner-Reymond earned 164 World Cup victories from 2007-23 in telemark skiing, which is not an Olympic discipline. Shiffrin reached 100 before her 30th birthday on March 13 by starting her tally early, dominating slalom for most of the last 12 years (63 World Cup slalom victories are 28 more than any other woman in history) and also winning the most giant slaloms in women's World Cup history (22). She stayed relatively injury-free in a high-risk sport until two crashes in 2024. The women's Alpine skiing World Cup continues next weekend with two downhills and a super-G in Kvitfjell, Norway. Mikaela Shiffrin's most memorable of her 99 World Cup wins Mikaela Shiffrin's most memorable FIS Alpine skiing World Cup wins from her career dating to 2012. Nick Zaccardi, Nick Zaccardi,

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