Michaela Schiffrin Wins Again New Video
Tall skier | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Disciplines | Slalom, Giant slalom, Super-G, Downhill, Combined | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Club | Burke Mount University | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Built-in | (1995-03-13) March thirteen, 1995 [i] Vail, Colorado, United states | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 5 ft 7 in (170 cm)[2] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Earth Cup debut | March xi, 2011 (age 15) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Olympics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Teams | 3 – (2014, 2018, 2022) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medals | 3 (2 gold) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
World Championships | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Teams | 5 – (2013–21) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medals | 11 (half-dozen gold) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
World Cup | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Seasons | 12 – (2011–2022) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wins | 74 – (47 SL, xiv GS, 4 SG, 3 DH, 1 AC, 3 CE, 2 PSL) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Podiums | 119 – (66 SL, 31 GS, 8 SG, half dozen DH, 1 Ac, v CE, 2 PSL) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Overall titles | 3 – (2017, 2018, 2019) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Field of study titles | eight – (SL – 2013–15, 2017–19, SG – 2019, GS – 2019) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Mikaela Pauline Shiffrin (born March xiii, 1995) is an American two-time Olympic Gold Medalist and World Loving cup alpine skier. She is a 3-time Overall World Cup champion, a four-time world champion in slalom, and a six-time winner of the World Loving cup field of study title in that event.[three] [4] Shiffrin is the youngest slalom champion in Olympic alpine skiing history, at 18 years and 345 days.[5] [6] [vii] [8]
By winning her 2d Olympic gilded medal in the 2018 behemothic slalom, Shiffrin tied Ted Ligety and Andrea Mead Lawrence for the most Olympic gold medals ever won by an American Olympian in tall skiing. She is 1 of only v Americans to always win the World Cup overall title. In Globe Championships, she is the most busy American alpine skier in history, having won most medals (11) overall, a record six of them gold.[9] She is also the first and only athlete—male or female—with wins in all 6 FIS Alpine Ski World Loving cup disciplines. She has won World Cup races in ladies' slalom, parallel slalom, giant slalom, super-G, downhill, and alpine combined. She is the youngest skier—male or female—to win l World Cup races, doing so at the age of 23 years and 9 months.
She has won 74 Earth Cup races, the 2nd nigh all time by a female person alpine skier, including 47 WC slalom races, the most won past whatever alpine skier, male or female, in any subject field. She is the just athlete – male or female – to have won 15 races in the aforementioned calendar year, winning the last slalom of the 2018 flavour in Semmering and surpassing Marcel Hirscher. In the 2019 season she became the first athlete, male person or female, to win 17 World Cup races during a season, breaking the record of 14 wins that Vreni Schneider had held for 30 years. By winning the Gold in the Slalom at the 2019 World Championships, she became the first Alpine skier to win the world championship in the same discipline at 4 consecutive championships.
Groundwork and early years [edit]
Born in Vail, Colorado,[2] Shiffrin is the second child of Eileen (née Condron) and Jeff Shiffrin, both originally from the Northeastern United States and quondam ski racers.[10] [eleven] Shiffrin's begetter Jeff grew upwardly in New Jersey, but was an avid skier on weekends in Vermont with his family; as an undergraduate, he raced for Dartmouth College in New Hampshire.[12] Her female parent Eileen raced in high school in northwestern Massachusetts in the Berkshires,[11] and her brother Taylor (born 1992) raced for the Academy of Denver.[thirteen]
When Mikaela was eight in 2003, the family moved to rural New Hampshire most Lyme,[14] where her male parent, an anesthesiologist, worked at Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Eye. After five years, he took a new job in Denver;[xv] her older brother Taylor was in high school at Shush Mountain University, a ski academy in northeastern Vermont, and stayed in the east. Shiffrin also attended middle school at Shush, but went with her parents to Colorado, before returning to Shush.[12] [sixteen]
From a young age Mikaela had stiff results in major competitions. In March 2010, at historic period 14, she won both the slalom and GS at the Topolino Games in Italian republic, against skiers from 40 nations.[17] The following winter, at present meeting the FIS minimum age requirement of xv years, she won a Nor-Am Loving cup super combined race in Dec 2010 at Panorama in British Columbia, only the eighth FIS-level race in which she had competed. Shiffrin followed it up with iii podiums in her adjacent three Nor-Am races: runner-upwards in a super-Yard, third in a GS, and victory in a slalom. Weeks later, she won a pair of Nor-Am slalom races held at Sun River, Maine. A month subsequently Shiffrin took the slalom bronze medal at the FIS Junior Earth Ski Championships held at Crans-Montana, Switzerland (after having been down with a stomach virus the day before).[eighteen] In January 2015, Shiffrin named Croatian former ski racer Janica Kostelić every bit her idol while growing up.
Ski racing career [edit]
Shiffrin made her Globe Cup debut on March eleven, 2011, in a giant slalom at Špindlerův Mlýn in the Czech Commonwealth. In early April, but a few weeks after her 16th birthday, she won the slalom title at the United states of america National Championships at Winter Park, Colorado,[nineteen] and became the youngest American ski racer to claim a national alpine crown.[xx]
2012 season [edit]
During the 2012 Alpine Skiing World Cup, Shiffrin took her start Globe Loving cup podium on Dec 29, 2011, at a slalom in Lienz, Republic of austria. She started 40th and lost her left shin baby-sit halfway downwardly, but finished in 12th identify in the showtime run. Shiffrin, age 16, then posted the fastest time in the 2nd run to secure tertiary identify.[21] [22] [23]
2013 flavour [edit]
Shiffrin won her beginning World Cup race in December 2012 at age 17, in a night slalom in Åre, Sweden.[24] She became the second-youngest American to win an alpine Earth Cup consequence, behind Judy Nagel (17 yr, 5 mo.).[25] Shiffrin'southward second win came two weeks later at a night slalom at Zagreb, Republic of croatia;[26] and her third win 11 days after at another night slalom in Flachau, Austria.[27] Subsequently winning the slalom at the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide, she secured the 2013 season championship in the slalom discipline.[iii] Though she spent most of her last two years of high schoolhouse in Europe on the World Loving cup excursion, she graduated on time from Burke Mountain Academy in June.[28] [29]
2014 season [edit]
Shiffrin opened the 2014 flavor in October 2013 in Sölden, Republic of austria, with a career-best sixth in giant slalom, inside a one-half-second of the podium. She won the next event, a slalom at Levi, Finland, improving on her podium finish the previous year for her fifth World Cup victory. At Beaver Creek, she was runner-up in the giant slalom, her starting time World Cup podium in that discipline. On January 5, Shiffrin secured first identify in a ii-run slalom race in Bormio, Italy (the race took place at that place instead of being, as scheduled, in Zagreb due to bad snowfall/weather conditions). She also won the earth loving cup slalom races in Flachau, Åre and Lenzerheide, to secure a sequent World Cup slalom championship. Shiffrin ended the flavour equally the reigning Olympic, World Loving cup, and world champion in slalom. That year, she was named one of ESPNW's Impact 25.[xxx]
2015 season [edit]
Shiffrin opened the 2015 flavor in October 2014 in Sölden with her offset World Cup win in giant slalom. She had some trouble with slalom at first and ended upwards outside the podium in the get-go iii World Loving cup slalom races, but emerged victorious in the races at Kühtai, Zagreb, Maribor, Åre and Méribel.[31] [32] [33] [34] She ended upward winning the slalom earth loving cup championship once once again.[4] Shiffrin as well won the Earth Championship in slalom held in Beaver Creek next to her home city of Vail, Colorado, U.s..
2016 season [edit]
In the kickoff 2 slalom races of the 2016 flavour, both in Aspen, Shiffrin won past large margins, and in her outset race, she achieved a new record margin for women'due south slalom, 3.07 seconds over the runner-up. On December 12, 2015, during the warm-up for the giant slalom in Åre, she roughshod and injured her knee. Later ii months away from racing, Shiffrin made a successful return in her first race back on February 15, 2016, where she took her 18th victory in Crans-Montana. In the 2016 season, she won all v slaloms she started. She missed the other 5 slaloms due to injuries, and chose non to compete in a parallel slalom in Stockholm.[35]
2017 flavour [edit]
Shiffrin opened the 2017 flavour with a 2nd-identify finish in giant slalom at Sölden in October 2016. This was followed by a victory in slalom at Levi on November 12. On Nov 26, 2016, she finished fifth in giant slalom at Killington in her first World Cup race in Vermont, only she returned the following day to a showtime-place finish in the slalom. On Dec 11, 2016, Shiffrin won her 11th straight World Loving cup win in the slalom in Sestriere, Italian republic. On December 27, Shiffrin won the giant slalom in Semmering, Republic of austria, her 2d career giant slalom win and her outset solo behemothic slalom win. The next twenty-four hours, she repeated and won her third career giant slalom and 25th Earth cup career victory.[36] Shiffrin afterward won the terminal race held at Semmering, a slalom, on December 29, 2016, achieving her 26th Globe cup victory and completing her sweep of races at the resort. This fabricated her the first adult female to take three wins in three consecutive days in technical disciplines since Vreni Schneider won 2 giant slaloms in Schwarzenberg and a slalom in Mellau in January 1989.[37] However she missed out on equalling the record of 8 consecutive slalom wins, jointly held by Schneider and Janica Kostelić, when she failed to finish first run of the Snowfall Queen Trophy race in Zagreb on January 3 – her first DNF in slalom since a race in Semmering in 2012. On January 29 in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italia, Shiffrin posted her best issue in a speed event, finishing quaternary in the super-G, just 0.03 seconds off the podium. She won her first parallel slalom on January 31 in Stockholm, Sweden.[ citation needed ]
At the World Championships in St. Moritz in February, she won the gilt medal in slalom and took the silvery in behemothic slalom. The gold was her third consecutive in slalom at the Globe Championships; she became the start woman to do this in the Earth Cup era, and the beginning since Germany'due south Christl Cranz in 1939, when the Worlds were held annually.[38]
On February 26, Shiffrin won her first super combined race at Crans-Montana. It was her ninth World Cup victory of the flavour, and extended her lead in the overall standings. She has more than World Loving cup victories before the age of 22 than Ingemar Stenmark, the record holder for number of Globe Cup victories. In Squaw Valley, the showtime World Cup races there since 1969, she won the giant slalom on March 10 and the slalom the following day, taking her to 31 World Cup victories and 11 for the season. This secured her her fourth slalom globe cup. In Aspen, Colorado, the World Cup finals of the season took place. Shiffrin secured her kickoff overall World Cup, but did not win the giant slalom World Loving cup that year. Subsequently the flavor, she received the "Skieur d'Or" (golden skier) accolade, given past the international ski journalist clan to the best alpine skier of the twelvemonth (one accolade for both genders).[ citation needed ]
2018 season [edit]
Shiffrin started the 2018 season with a 5th-place stop in giant slalom at Sölden. In early Dec she competed in downhill at Lake Louise, where she reached her commencement downhill podium (3rd identify) and the adjacent twenty-four hours she won her offset downhill race in her fourth always start.[ citation needed ]
Between December xix and January 9, Shiffrin won eight of the 9 races on the World Cup circuit (4 SL, 2 GS, and 2 PSL). She made history winning the very first FIS parallel slalom with the win in Courchevel, France. And then she won the slalom in Lienz, Austria to finish her 2017 year. She started 2018 with the win in the Metropolis Event in Oslo, Kingdom of norway and became the starting time women ever with 2 wins in City Issue. Ii days later she won the slalom in Zagreb, Croatia. With wins in both the giant slalom and slalom at Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, Shiffrin clocked up her 39th and 40th World Cup wins at age 22. She then won the slalom in Flachau, Austria to equal Annemarie Moser-Pröll's record of 41 World Loving cup wins before 23rd altogether. She too became the first woman in history to win the offset v Earth Loving cup races of a calendar yr and the start 1 in 20 years (since Katja Seizinger) to win 5 direct Globe Loving cup races. Subsequently a third place in downhill, things stopped going her mode. The rest of Jan had two seventh places and 3 races where she did not finish.[ citation needed ]
At the 2018 Wintertime Olympics, in Pyeongchang, South korea – later on several days of conditions postponements, which acquired the first 3 and final two races to be held on sequent days, Shiffrin won golden in behemothic slalom besides as argent in super combined. In the giant slalom she finished second afterward the first run behind Italian Manuela Moelgg, but was able to secure the gold when Moelgg fabricated mistakes on the 2d run. Due to weather condition delays, the slalom was contested the day after the giant slalom. Shiffrin entered the heavy favorite as the reigning Olympic champion, 3-time consecutive globe champion, reigning World Cup champion and the globe loving cup leader in the event. She finished the first run in fourth, and was unable to improve her ranking afterward the second run, missing the podium afterwards winning every single major slalom title that she entered in her career beforehand. Although she had originally intended to run at least 4 races, she pulled out of the super-Chiliad due to information technology existence held the day afterwards slalom, assertive that she would non be able to perform well if she did 3 races in every bit many days. The weather delays also caused the downhill and the super combined to exist held on consecutive days, choosing to run only one of the ii. Believing she had her best take chances at a medal in super combined, she pulled out of the downhill after running all three training runs, her all-time terminate being 5th in the third and final training run. In the super combined, the final individual alpine event on the Olympic schedule, she finished sixth afterwards downhill. However, she was far behind the leader, 1.98 seconds behind compatriot Lindsey Vonn. Still, due to having the tertiary fastest slalom run—and many of the leaders of the first run having mistakes in the second—she was able to move up to the silver medal position behind Michelle Gisin of Switzerland. Her gilt and silver medals coming out of the Olympics made her the most decorated American Olympian, the most busy female person alpine skier, and the second most busy alpine skier overall, only behind Marcel Hirscher of Republic of austria who won two gold medals.[ citation needed ]
Shiffrin secured her 2nd consecutive Earth Cup overall title on March ix, 2018, with 5 races left in the season. At the Earth Cup Finals in Åre, Sweden she won the slalom by 1.58 seconds over Wendy Holdener of Switzerland, her twelfth win of the flavour. This tied her for second with her teammate Lindsey Vonn for most World Cup wins in a single season by a adult female, behind Swiss skier Vreni Schneider property the record of 14.[ commendation needed ]
2019 season [edit]
On Dec 2, 2018, she won a super-Thousand race in Lake Louise, becoming the only alpine skier always — male or female — to win all six currently contested alpine skiing disciplines. These include slalom, giant slalom, downhill, super-1000, combined, and the most recently added, parallel slalom (also called a metropolis event). Tina Maze and Lindsey Vonn never won a parallel slalom race since its introduction into World Cup competition. With her 1st super-G World Loving cup win at Lake Louise, Shiffrin became the seventh woman to win in the five more traditional disciplines (not including parallel slalom). She joined Lindsey Vonn, Tina Maze, Janica Kostelić, Anja Pärson, Pernilla Wiberg and Petra Kronberger.[ citation needed ]
On December 8, 2018, she won her 2nd Super-Yard at St. Moritz, Switzerland for her first back-to-back speed wins. The next day, December 9, she won her fourth parallel slalom with a dramatic win over her main slalom rival, the Slovakian Petra Vlhová. This marked her fifth win out of 9 season races to start the 2018–2019 season. On Dec 22, 2018, she won the slalom in Courchevel, France and became the youngest skier ever – female or male – to win 50 Earth Cup ski races, at the age of 23 years and 9 months. With that race she too equalled the record of the Austrian Marlies Schild for the most wins in women's slalom – 35,[39] and put herself in joint 7th place in all-time World Loving cup victories with Alberto Tomba of Italy.[ citation needed ]
One week later, she took another World Loving cup slalom win in Semmering, Austria, condign the starting time alpine skier to have xv World Loving cup wins in a single agenda year, moving alee of Marcel Hirscher, who had taken 14 wins in 2018: both had broken the old record of xiii wins which had been set by Ingemar Stenmark in 1979. The race was also her 36th World Cup slalom win, breaking Schild's record: Shiffrin afterward described Schild as "my biggest idol beside Bode Miller".[40]
At the start of Feb 2019, shortly before the 2019 Alpine Globe Ski Championships, Shiffrin moved into third place on the list female skiers with the most World Cup race wins at a meeting in Maribor, tying with Vlhová for the win in a behemothic slalom to put her equal with Vreni Schneider on 55 wins before winning a slalom the following twenty-four hour period to overtake the Swiss skier.[41]
At the World Championships, Shiffrin won the golden medal in the super-G[42] before taking a bronze in the giant slalom in windy, changeable atmospheric condition, finishing behind Vlhová and Viktoria Rebensburg.[43] She went on to secure a second gold in the slalom, becoming the first alpine skier to win four consecutive Earth Championships in the aforementioned discipline, despite suffering from a lung infection on the day of the race.[44] [45]
Following the Worlds, in March 2019 Shiffrin became the first alpine skier to have fifteen World Cup wins in a season when she took victory in a slalom in Špindlerův Mlýn, breaking the tape she had previously held jointly with Vreni Schneider.[46] At the World Cup finals in Soldeu, Shiffrin started her campaign by clinching the super-Chiliad crystal globe, finishing fourth in the last race to have her tenth World Cup title and her outset in a speed discipline, having already congenital an unassailable lead to secure the overall and slalom titles earlier in the season. She became the first skier to win World Cups in a technical and a speed consequence in the same season since Tina Maze 6 years earlier.[47] She went on to win the slalom, her 16th win of the season and the 40th slalom win of her career, tying with Stenmark for the near World Cup slalom race wins.[48] The following day she took her 17th win of the season and the 60th win of her career in the behemothic slalom to secure the GS crystal globe, condign the first skier to win the overall, super-Yard, behemothic slalom and slalom World Cup titles in a single flavor.[49] She besides later won her 41st slalom race, making her the skier who has won the most World Cup slalom races.[50]
2020 season [edit]
Shiffrin had inconsistent performances in the technical races in the showtime half of the 2020 season, winning iii slalom races to offset, simply placing runner upward to Petra Vlhova later in the season. She also experienced like fluctuations in ranking in Giant Slalom. Nonetheless, she competed more than frequently in speed races and following the Bansko Earth Cup in Jan 2020, had recorded 6 victories for the flavour, 3 slaloms and i each in behemothic slalom, Super-M and Downhill; off pace with her functioning in previous seasons, merely still the almost on the Globe Cup bout and with a considerable lead in the Overall Standings. However, on February 2, 2020, her father unexpectedly died in an accident,[51] causing her to accept an indefinite suspension from the World Cup tour and her chances of a fourth consecutive title. She did attend the final competition in Are, Sweden, but the race was canceled due to coronavirus. As a result, Petra Vlhova took over the tiptop spot of the slalom rankings following a Earth Cup in Slovenia, the first time Shiffrin wasn't leading slalom at that bespeak in the season since 2016 and Federica Brignone reduced her lead in the overall from over 400 points to just over 100, and afterward took over the pb in the overall, which marked the stop of Shiffrin's 3-year winning streak.
2021 flavour [edit]
Shiffrin missed the first race weekend of the season in Sölden due to a back issue,[52] but returned to racing in the commencement of the ii slalom races at Levi, where she placed second.[53] Shiffrin has non yet managed to return to the same level of domination that she left the World Cup circuit on, only has placed in the meridian six in every race, winning the Courchevel giant slalom in December and the Flachau night slalom in January, and placing tertiary in the slalom at Semmering in late Dec.
Even so, at the 2021 World Championships in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Shiffrin emerged on top grade, performing perhaps even ameliorate than expected and winning four medals, the nearly she has won in a single Earth Championship event. Her bronze medal run in the Super G was her start fourth dimension competing in a speed event in over a twelvemonth, as she had opted not to render to speed events in this season, due both to her wanting to ensure that the return to racing would non exist too heavy too as the COVID-19 pandemic keeping her apart from the speed teams and from existence able to practice enough speed training. This feat was made more impressive by the fact that she had only trained Super-Grand for four days going into the contest.[54] Her gold medal in the Alpine Combined fabricated her the nigh successful American alpine skier in the Earth Championships – with her sixth gilt and ninth medal she surpassed the record five WCH gold medals won by Ted Ligety, also every bit the record of viii WCH medals in total held by Lindsey Vonn.[55]
In the Giant Slalom, many of the favorites struggled, with Globe Cup leader Marta Bassino, 2 fourth dimension world champion Tessa Worley and reigning globe champion Petra Vlhova struggling in both runs while the host land favorite Federica Brignone failed to end the first run. Shiffrin ultimately won the silver in the Giant Slalom after narrowly finishing in first after one run, only .02 ahead of teammate Nina O'Brien and .08 ahead of Lara Gut-Behrami. Going into the second run with a narrow lead, a error at the top of the course acquired her to miss out on the aureate medal; although she made up lost time at the bottom of the class it wasn't enough, finishing only .02 seconds backside Gut-Behrami. Austrian Katharina Liensberger moved up to third with just a .09 second arrears, making it the closest contested Giant Slalom in globe championship history. Shiffrin entered the concluding race of the championships, the slalom, with a tape 4 consecutive world championship titles to her proper noun. However, she struggled in the commencement run, skiing into fourth with a ane.30 second deficit behind Liensberger, Vlhova and Wendy Holdener. She was able to overtake Holdener in the 2nd run, just was beaten by Vlhova and Liensberger, winning the statuary and losing the slalom championship for the beginning time in her career; however, her bronze medal win nevertheless gave her an 11th world championship medal, tied with Anja Parson for the most medals won since World State of war 2, the nearly medals won by an athlete at the 2021 championships and extending her record as the virtually busy American alpine skier in globe championship history.
2022 season [edit]
At the 2022 Winter Olympics, Shiffrin was favored to win gold in at least three of the six events she was planning to compete in (especially her signature slalom and giant slalom). However, she uncharacteristically had a Did Not Finish (DNF) in the behemothic slalom and slalom, skiing out after the fifth gate in the get-go run of each race.[56] She finished 9th in the super-Grand.[57] [58] In the remaining individual events (downhill and combined), Shiffrin did not win a medal.[59] She competed in the mixed team result for the start time on the concluding day of contest, finishing quaternary as part of the U.S. team.[sixty] [61]
World Loving cup results [edit]
Flavor titles [edit]
- 11 titles – (3 overall, 6 Slalom, 1 Super-G, i Behemothic slalom)
Season | |
Subject | |
2013 | Slalom |
---|---|
2014 | Slalom |
2015 | Slalom |
2017 | Overall |
Slalom | |
2018 | Overall |
Slalom | |
2019 | Overall |
Slalom | |
Super-G | |
Giant slalom |
Season standings [edit]
Season | ||||||||
Age | Overall | Slalom | Giant Slalom | Super-Yard | Downhill | Combined | Parallel | |
2012 | 16 | 43 | 17 | 49 | — | — | — | N/A |
2013 | 17 | 5 | 1 | nineteen | — | — | — | |
2014 | 18 | 6 | i | vii | — | — | — | |
2015 | nineteen | four | 1 | 3 | — | — | — | |
2016 | 20 | 10 | 4 | 21 | 39 | — | 23 | |
2017 | 21 | 1 | i | two | 24 | 36 | half dozen | |
2018 | 22 | one | i | 3 | 28 | 5 | — | |
2019 | 23 | 1 | 1 | 1 | one | 25 | — | |
2020 | 24 | 2 | ii | 3 | seven | 5 | — | 20 |
2021 | 25 | 4 | two | 2 | — | — | Due north/A | — |
2022 | 26 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 26 | — |
- Standings through March 16, 2022
Race victories [edit]
Total | Slalom | Giant Slalom | Downhill | Super-G | Combined | Parallel | |
Wins | 74 | 47 | 14 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 5 |
Podiums | 119 | 66 | 31 | 6 | 8 | 1 | 7 |
- Updated through March xvi, 2022
Season | |||
Date | Location | Discipline | |
2013 four victories (4 SL) | December 20, 2012 | Åre, Sweden | Slalom |
January 4, 2013 | Zagreb, Croatia | Slalom | |
January fifteen, 2013 | Flachau, Austria | Slalom | |
March 16, 2013 | Lenzerheide, Switzerland | Slalom | |
2014 5 victories (5 SL) | November 16, 2013 | Levi, Republic of finland | Slalom |
Jan 5, 2014 | Bormio, Italy | Slalom | |
January xiv, 2014 | Flachau, Austria | Slalom | |
March eight, 2014 | Åre, Sweden | Slalom | |
March 15, 2014 | Lenzerheide, Switzerland | Slalom | |
2015 6 victories (v SL, 1 GS) | October 25, 2014 | Sölden, Austria | Giant slalom |
December 29, 2014 | Kühtai, Austria | Slalom | |
January 4, 2015 | Zagreb, Croatia | Slalom | |
February 22, 2015 | Maribor, Slovenia | Slalom | |
March fourteen, 2015 | Åre, Sweden | Slalom | |
March 21, 2015 | Méribel, France | Slalom | |
2016 5 victories (five SL) | November 28, 2015 | Aspen, USA | Slalom |
November 29, 2015 | Slalom | ||
February 15, 2016 | Crans-Montana, Switzerland | Slalom | |
March 6, 2016 | Jasná, Slovakia | Slalom | |
March 19, 2016 | St. Moritz, Switzerland | Slalom | |
2017 11 victories (6 SL, 3 GS, 1 Air conditioning, ane CE) | November 12, 2016 | Levi, Finland | Slalom |
November 27, 2016 | Killington, USA | Slalom | |
December 11, 2016 | Sestriere, Italy | Slalom | |
December 27, 2016 | Semmering, Austria | Behemothic slalom | |
December 28, 2016 | Giant slalom | ||
December 29, 2016 | Slalom | ||
January 8, 2017 | Maribor, Slovenia | Slalom | |
January 31, 2017 | Stockholm, Sweden | Metropolis upshot | |
February 26, 2017 | Crans-Montana, Switzerland | Combined | |
March 10, 2017 | Squaw Valley, Usa | Giant slalom | |
March eleven, 2017 | Slalom | ||
2018 12 victories (7 SL, 1 DH, 2 GS, ane PS one CE) | Nov 26, 2017 | Killington, USA | Slalom |
Dec two, 2017 | Lake Louise, Canada | Downhill | |
December xix, 2017 | Courchevel, French republic | Giant slalom | |
December 20, 2017 | Parallel slalom | ||
December 28, 2017 | Lienz, Austria | Slalom | |
January 1, 2018 | Oslo, Norway | City event | |
January 3, 2018 | Zagreb, Republic of croatia | Slalom | |
January 6, 2018 | Kranjska Gora, Slovenia | Giant slalom | |
January 7, 2018 | Slalom | ||
January 9, 2018 | Flachau, Republic of austria | Slalom | |
March x, 2018 | Ofterschwang, Germany | Slalom | |
March 17, 2018 | Åre, Sweden | Slalom | |
2019 17 victories (8 SL, four GS, 3 SG, 1 PS 1 CE) | Nov 17, 2018 | Levi, Finland | Slalom |
Nov 25, 2018 | Killington, USA | Slalom | |
December 2, 2018 | Lake Louise, Canada | Super-Grand | |
December eight, 2018 | St. Moritz, Switzerland | Super-G | |
December 9, 2018 | Parallel slalom | ||
December 21, 2018 | Courchevel, France | Behemothic slalom | |
Dec 22, 2018 | Slalom | ||
December 29, 2018 | Semmering, Austria | Slalom | |
Jan 5, 2019 | Zagreb, Croatia | Slalom | |
Jan 15, 2019 | Kronplatz, Italy | Giant slalom | |
January xx, 2019 | Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italia | Super-K | |
February 1, 2019 | Maribor, Slovenia | Giant slalom | |
February ii, 2019 | Slalom | ||
February 19, 2019 | Stockholm, Sweden | Urban center event | |
March 9, 2019 | Špindlerův Mlýn, Czech Republic | Slalom | |
March 16, 2019 | Soldeu, Principality of andorra | Slalom | |
March 17, 2019 | Giant slalom | ||
2020 6 victories (3 SL, one GS, i DH, ane SG) | November 23, 2019 | Levi, Finland | Slalom |
December 1, 2019 | Killington, United states | Slalom | |
December 28, 2019 | Lienz, Austria | Behemothic slalom | |
December 29, 2019 | Slalom | ||
January 24, 2020 | Bansko, Bulgaria | Downhill | |
January 26, 2020 | Super-Grand | ||
2021 3 victories (2 SL, 1 GS) | December xiv, 2020 | Courchevel, French republic | Giant slalom |
Jan 12, 2021 | Flachau, Austria | Slalom | |
March vi, 2021 | Jasná, Slovakia | Slalom | |
2022 v victories (two GS, 2 SL, ane DH) | October 23, 2021 | Sölden, Austria | Giant slalom |
November 28, 2021 | Killington, USA | Slalom | |
Dec 21, 2021 | Courchevel, France | Giant slalom | |
January 11, 2022 | Schladming, Austria | Slalom | |
March 16, 2022 | Courchevel, France | Downhill |
Podiums [edit]
Season | Podiums | |||||||||||||||||||||
Downhill | Super One thousand | Behemothic Slalom | Slalom | Parallel[1] | Combined | Total | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Σ | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2012 | ane | 1 | one | |||||||||||||||||||
2013 | four | 2 | 1 | 4 | three | 7 | ||||||||||||||||
2014 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 5 | 2 | one | 8 | ||||||||||||||
2015 | ane | 1 | five | 1 | 6 | 2 | 8 | |||||||||||||||
2016 | 1 | 5 | v | 1 | 6 | |||||||||||||||||
2017 | 3 | 1 | 6 | one | 1 | 1 | 1 | 11 | 2 | 1 | xiv | |||||||||||
2018 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 7 | i | 2 | 12 | 2 | 4 | 18 | ||||||||||
2019 | iii | 4 | 2 | eight | ane | 2 | 1 | 17 | two | 2 | 21 | |||||||||||
2020 | 1 | 1 | 1 | i | 1 | 1 | 2 | iii | 1 | i | six | 3 | 4 | 13 | ||||||||
2021 | 1 | i | i | ii | iii | 2 | 3 | 4 | 3 | ten | ||||||||||||
2022 | one | i | 2 | 2 | i | one | 2 | iii | 5 | 5 | 3 | 13 | ||||||||||
Full | iii | ane | 2 | 4 | 1 | three | 14 | 7 | 10 | 47 | 11 | 8 | 5 | one | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 74 | 21 | 24 | 119 |
6 | 8 | 31 | 66 | 7 | i | 119 |
i Including both parallel slalom and parallel giant slalom.
World Championship results [edit]
Shiffrin competed in her first Earth Championships in 2013 at Schladming, Austria, and finished sixth in the behemothic slalom at Planai. Two days later in the slalom, she won the earth championship at historic period 17.[62]
Year | ||||||
Age | Slalom | Giant Slalom | Super-G | Downhill | Combined | |
2013 | 17 | i | half dozen | — | — | — |
2015 | 19 | i | eight | — | — | — |
2017 | 21 | 1 | two | — | — | — |
2019 | 23 | 1 | 3 | ane | — | — |
2021 | 25 | iii | 2 | 3 | — | one |
Olympic results [edit]
Favored to win the slalom at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russian federation, Shiffrin led after the first run and nearly barbarous in the second, simply held on for victory at Rosa Khutor. Three weeks shy of her 19th birthday, she became the youngest slalom champion in Olympic history.[6] [7] [8] Three days earlier, she finished 5th in the giant slalom, held in the rain.[63]
She competed in the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang where she won the gold medal in the giant slalom and silver medal in the Combined.[64] She placed fourth in the slalom despite being favored to win the gold medal in the event.[65]
Twelvemonth | |||||||
Age | Slalom | Giant Slalom | Super-G | Downhill | Combined | Team upshot | |
2014 | 18 | ane | 5 | — | — | — | N/A |
2018 | 22 | iv | 1 | — | — | two | — |
2022 | 26 | DNF1 | DNF1 | 9 | 18 | DNF2 | 4 |
Media appearances and documentaries [edit]
Days later on her offset World Cup finals in 2013, Shiffrin was interviewed by David Letterman on the Tardily Bear witness on March 19.[66] [67]
In 2014, Shiffrin was featured in a one-60 minutes special on NBC television, How to Raise an Olympian, on February 5. Hosted by Meredith Vieira, it chronicled the journeys of seven United states Olympians and featured interviews from parents and coaches along with abode video and photos from each athlete'south childhood. The event was broadcast on telly with live social-media components to heighten each segment.[68] After Shiffrin's first gold medal win, she played "Take hold of Phrase" with Reese Witherspoon and Usher on The This evening Prove Starring Jimmy Fallon.[69] On July 12, 2014, Shiffrin was a invitee on the NPR radio show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!,[70] where she won the show's Non My Job game at the Ruby-red Rocks Amphitheatre.[71]
On October 27, 2016, Shiffrin, speaking in German language, presented the award for the best Austrian sportsman to Marcel Hirscher at a sports gala in Republic of austria.[72] [73] In 2017, Shiffrin discussed her skiing roots and aptitude for napping on NBC's Late Night with Seth Meyers.[74] In 2018, Shiffrin was profiled on CBS News' hour.[75]
In the weeks later on the Feb 2019 Globe Ski Title, Amanda Ruggeri twice profiled Shiffrin in Deadspin,[76] [77] and she was featured in The Wall Street Journal.[78] In March 2019, later on the conclusion of her record-setting World Loving cup season, she discussed treatment anxiety on NBC's Today,[79] addressed dealing with social media trolls on CNN,[80] discussed pay equity on ABC'southward Good Morning time America [81] and the entertainment news show Access,[82] and taught host Jimmy Fallon how to do the shuffle trip the light fantastic toe on NBC's Tonight Bear witness.[83] The New York Times profiled Shiffrin equally "the confront of American skiing,",[84] a theme echoed in a Sports Illustrated contour and video where Shiffrin talked in detail virtually her history with Lindsey Vonn.[85]
Shiffrin has been the subject of long-form documentary videos. She is ofttimes featured in Exterior's "In Search of Speed," including in 2015,[86] 2017[87] and 2018.[87] After covering Shiffrin'south training regimen in 2017,[88] Cherry-red Balderdash in 2018 produced the 48-minutes long documentary "Peak Season: The Determination of Mikaela Shiffrin."[89] [90] In April 2019, NBC's Olympic aqueduct devoted 25 hours of prime-time to feature 20 of Shiffrin's races in the 2018–2019 season;[91] her fanclub also released a compilation of highlights from her 2018–2019 season.[92]
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External links [edit]
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikaela_Shiffrin
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