Mikaela Shiffrin storms to second Winter Olympic slalom gold, 12 years after first

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With one last chance to break an Olympic hoodoo stretching back a remarkable eight years, Mikaela Shiffrin delivered in style. The 30-year-old American surged to victory in the women’s slalom on a sun-splashed Wednesday in the Dolomites with a two-run time of 1min 39.10sec, becoming the first US skier to win three Olympic gold medals.

Switzerland’s Camille Rast, the reigning world champion and only woman to have beaten Shiffrin in her signature discipline this season, came in a yawning 1.50sec behind for the silver – the largest winning margin in any Olympic alpine skiing event since 1998 – while Anna Swenn Larsson of Sweden took the bronze. After fourth-placed Wendy Holdener of Switzerland, the rest of the field trailed by at least two seconds, according to provisional results.

Wearing the No 7 bib, Shiffrin overcame a split-second wobble during her opening run when she clipped a gate midway down the course, but she regained her rhythm immediately and pumped her first after crossing in 47.13sec, a huge 0.82sec ahead of Germany’s Lena Duerr and the largest first-run lead in an Olympic women’s slalom in 66 years. No one else came within a second of Shiffrin’s time.

She was just as commanding on her second trip down the gleaming Olympia delle Tofane track, building on her early lead and becoming only the second woman to win the Olympic slalom more than once after Switzerland’s Vreni Schneider.

Mikaela Shiffrin with the mountains at her back on her second run in the women’s slalom
Mikaela Shiffrin with the mountains at her back on her second run in the women’s slalom. Photograph: Lisi Niesner/Reuters

Shiffrin’s Olympic ledger stripped of context – slalom gold as an 18-year-old prodigy in Sochi, giant slalom gold and combined silver in Pyeongchang – would be career-defining for most skiers. But she had failed to medal in any of the six races sheentered in Beijing four years ago, including three shocking DNFs.

And while she rebounded to win a fifth overall World Cup title across all disciplines the following year, there were some around the circuit – including Shiffrin herself – who openly wondered if a harrowing crash two years ago during a World Cup race in Killington, Vermont, had taken something out of her she would never get back.

But she answered those questions with brio on Wednesday, becoming the oldest US woman to win a gold medal in alpine skiing after becoming the youngest 12 years ago. She has now won 58 of 72 slalom races when leading after the opening run, an 81% conversion rate that places her among the sport’s great closers.

Mikaela Shiffrin (centre) celebrates with silver medallist Camille Rast (left) of Switzerland and Sweden’s Anna Swenn Larsson (right), who won bronze.
Mikaela Shiffrin (centre) celebrates with silver medallist Camille Rast (left) of Switzerland and Sweden’s Anna Swenn Larsson (right), who won bronze. Photograph: Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Shiffrin’s long-time rival in her preferred discipline, Slovakia’s Petra Vlhova, appeared far less than 100% in defense of her 2022 Beijing Olympic gold. Having returned to competition last week after a two-year recovery from multiple torn ligaments in her right knee, the 30-year-old came in nearly three seconds adrift of Shiffrin’s marker after the first run and could only improve to 20th overall.

Germany’s 22-year-old Emma Aicher, who took silver in the downhill last week, demonstrated her vast all-around promise by finishing ninth. Albania’s Lara Colturi, the lone teenager in the contest, finished in a tie for 10th alongside France’s Caitlin McFarlane.

Only four other winter athletes have won gold in the same event after a gap of 12 years and all of those were in team events, according to the Olympedia.org website, the most comprehensive database about the Olympic Games.

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