Mikaela Shiffrin's second DNF at BeijingOlympics even more shocking than her first
That’s the sum total of Mikaela Shiffrin’s performance so far at the Beijing Olympics, a Games where she was expected to contend for multiple medals. Two days after skiing out in the first run of the giant slalom, Shiffrin did the same in the first run of the slalom Wednesday.
Afterward, she sat in the snow for several minutes, crying and looking despondent. These were her two best events, races in which she has won gold medals, and she didn’t even get through the first run. It’s the first time she has failed to finish back-to-back technical races since December 2011, when she was 16 years old.
“We came all this way. We’re not done yet but GS and slalom, those were my biggest focuses, so it really feels like a lot of work for nothing,” Shiffrin said afterward, still appearing shell-shocked. “(People) will try to say, 'This happens’ and 'It’s OK’ and 'Don’t be too hard on yourself’ and all of that, but it is a lot of work for a grand total of five gates in the GS and five gates in the slalom. So that is not lost on me.
“It feels like everything,” she added, “but it’s not.”
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Shiffrin had called her DNF on Monday a “huge disappointment” and that she would never get over it, just as she’s never gotten over other races where she didn’t finish. But she also knew she couldn’t dwell on it because she had other races still to come.
Shiffrin said she felt her preparation the last two days was good, and she felt as if she was in a good frame of mind. Yet just as she did Monday, she got off balance going around the fourth gate and skied off after the fifth.
She’d been on the course for a little more than six seconds, a few seconds less than Monday.
Mikaela Shiffrin, of the United States skis out in the first run of the women's slalom at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Mikaela Shiffrin, of the United States skis out in the first run of the women's slalom at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
ROBERT F. BUKATY, AP
Asked what had happened, Shiffrin started to speak, paused, then shut her
eyes before looking back at the course.
“I was pushing,” she said, speaking haltingly, “and maybe it was just past my limit. I had the intention to do my best skiing and my quickest turns. But in order to do that I had to push the line, the tactics, and it’s really on the limit then and there’s not space to slip up even a little bit.
“I don’t know. I started with a strong mentality and then I was out of the course. And that was, well, disappointing.”
Shiffrin was expected to be one of the biggest stars in Beijing, not only for the Americans but for the entire Games. She has three medals from her first two Olympics, two of them gold, and is widely considered one of, if not the best, technical skiers of all time.
But the Olympics has not always been kind to the best U.S. skiers. Bode Miller has six Olympic medals, but only one of them is gold. Lindsey Vonn has more World Cup victories than anyone but Ingemar Stenmark and 20 season titles, yet has just one Olympic gold medal and two bronzes.
Vonn’s downhill victory at the 2010 Vancouver Games is considered by those who aren’t diehard ski racing fans to be her signature achievement. Yet she also had DNF in three races those Olympics.
Mikaela Shiffrin after skiing out of the women's slalom during the 2022 Beijing Olympics.
Mikaela Shiffrin after skiing out of the women's slalom during the 2022 Beijing Olympics.
ANDREW P. SCOTT-USA TODAY SPORTS
“Gutted for Mikaela Shiffrin but this does not take away from her storied career and what she can and will accomplish going forward. Keep your
head high,” Vonn said on Twitter, ending the post with a heart emoji.
Shiffrin has spoken in the past about being rattled by others’ expectations of her, and the wish she has of not disappointing anyone. No doubt some will question whether that is a factor here, though Shiffrin said she didn’t think so.
“My skiing has been really solid,” she said. “My entire career has taught me to trust in my skiing. If it’s good skiing, that’s all I have to rely on these race days. And when the pressure is high – of course the pressure is high, but that didn’t feel like the biggest issue today – when there is pressure and there’s some nerves and the feeling that I want to do well, I always just go back to that fundamental idea that good skiing will be there for me.
“It’s not the end of the world. And it’s so stupid to care this much,” Shiffrin said, choking back tears. “But I feel I have to question a lot now.”
There are still three races left: the super-G, the Alpine combined and the downhill. While Shiffrin didn’t rule out competing in all three, she didn’t rule it in, either, saying the U.S. team has others who are just as capable.
“And if I’m going to ski out on the fifth gate,” she said, “what’s the point?”
“It’s hard to know what exactly went wrong,” Shiffrin said later, “aside from I slipped up a bit on one turn and I didn’t have enough space to recover from it.”
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Mikaela Shiffrin on and off the slopes
Mikaela Shiffrin is hoping to enter all five individual Alpine skiing races at the Beijing Olympics.
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It's a miracle.' American Colby Stevenson soars to silver medal in men's freeski big air
BEIJING – American Colby Stevenson took home a surprise silver medal in the big air men’s freeskiing final, putting down two monster runs after crashing on his first attempt.
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'It's a miracle.' American Colby Stevenson soars to silver medal in men's freeski big air
DAN WOLKEN | USA TODAY
3 hours ago
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BEIJING – American Colby Stevenson took home a surprise silver medal in the big air men’s freeskiing final, putting down two monster runs after crashing on his first attempt.
Stevenson’s impressive switch left 1800 on his last jump – five full rotations in the air – launched him into medal position behind only Norway's Birk Ruud, who ended up with the gold medal. But Stevenson, who posted a combined 183.00 in an event where the two best jumps out of three are scored, still had to survive seven skiers with an opportunity to pass him.
In the end, none of them did as Stevenson – known more for his slopestyle prowess – made his first-ever podium in a significant big air competition.
"I’m totally on a cloud," he said. "It hasn’t quite set in yet. It’s a miracle I ended up on the podium today honestly.
A miracle in more ways than one. In May of 2016, Stevenson was driving late at night in Idaho when he just briefly fell asleep at the wheel. The resulting crash caused numerous injuries including a skull that cracked into 48 pieces and trauma to his brain that caused it to swell within a millimeter of permanent damage.
Just 18 at the time, there was no guarantee he would be able to resume a normal life, much less ski again. He still has visible scars from the accident, but he now views them as part of the journey he had to make to become a champion.
I've been saying it lately, your character is really defined in those tougher times in your life," Stevenson said. "That’s what defines who you are, so even though maybe you’re dealt bad cards it’s how you’re going to look at that in a positive light and move forward and push toward your dreams. Even though they seem so far out of reach, you just stay true to what you love."
Alexander Hall, who came into the event as the favorite among the American contingent after winning the Winter X Games big air title last month, failed to produce his best Wednesday and finished eighth. After scoring poorly due to a missed ski grab on his first jump, Hall came into his final run needing to do something special.
After deliberating about whether to play it safe and maybe sneaking onto the podium, he decided to attempt a 2160 – the rare, difficult trick he landed at the X Games – but could not quite land cleanly and was eliminated from the competition.
"I was stoked that I just went for it," he said. "I didn’t quite have enough air time and couldn’t quite land it, but hyped just to try and give it all I’ve got. Sometimes things don’t go your way so it’s all good. I think I’d have been more bummed if I played it safe and it didn’t end up panning out."
Still, Hall had some impact on the final result.
Prior to the competition, Stevenson had contemplated trying a trick he'd never brought out before called the "Nose Butter left triple 1620 Japan." In addition to the three vertical flips and 4½ rotations required to land it, the "nose butter" aspect refers to a difficult 180-degree spin before launching off the edge of the ramp.
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