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Shiffrin's Emotional Journey Back to the Top Featured in Sports Illustrated

By Megan Harrod
March, 4 2021
Mikaela Shiffrin Returns to the Top
Following yet another historic performance for two-time Olympic champion and six-time world champion, Mikaela Shiffrin's emotional journey back to the top was featured by sportswriter Greg Bishop in Sports Illustrated. (Sports Illustrated - Thomas Lovelock)

Following yet another historic performance at 2021 FIS World Ski Championships at Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy for two-time Olympic champion and six-time world champion, Mikaela Shiffrin's emotional journey back to the top was featured by sportswriter Greg Bishop in Sports Illustrated.  

In the piece, Bishop writes,

There were months where Mikaela Shiffrin didn’t want to ski, mixed with weeks where she wondered if she could. There were times, too, that she couldn’t, even if she wanted: canceled events, weather delays, race postponements, a 10-month break, a savage back injury and an unending global pandemic. She needed to grieve. Needed to move forward. Needed to look back. Some days, she wasn’t sure which one. Some days, she tried all three.

She thought about all that at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships last month, after her first race, the Super-G, had netted a bronze medal that meant something different than any race she had ever won. “I don’t know how to explain it,” she tells SI, over the phone, from Europe. “It’s more of a symbol of, like, I’ve always been good at focusing. But over the last year, that’s something I’ve had to relearn. And it’s still not always there, right?”

She thought about all that at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships last month, after her first race, the Super-G, had netted a bronze medal that meant something different than any race she had ever won. “I don’t know how to explain it,” she tells SI, over the phone, from Europe. “It’s more of a symbol of, like, I’ve always been good at focusing. But over the last year, that’s something I’ve had to relearn. And it’s still not always there, right?”

This is Mikaela Shiffrin attempting to make sense of Mikaela Shiffrin, an athlete as dominant and introspective as any on the planet—and one who confronted an even more difficult 2020 than her peers. She’s dominant, usually, in the technical, clinical sense—a ski-racing cyborg who also thinks deeply about her life and her performances. Meaning she’s not at all an actual machine—she just plays one on TV screens, barreling down mountains, winning races at a faster clip than anyone ever in her sport. But, “I was never really the athlete who made those heroic moments happen,” she says. “I always just relied on really, really solid preparation, a very methodical process. And then I pulled out a performance like that [in Italy], where, if I were somebody else, I would have felt an incredible inspiration watching it.”

Shiffrin, who has won an otherworldly career 14 medals in 18 events at the world championship and Olympic starts, has found the joy and confidence, once again, after a traumatic year. She's found her way back to the top...and she's working on becoming an even better version of herself. Her journey to Bejing 2022 is not one you're going to want to take your eyes off...stay tuned. 

Read the full article on SportsIllustrated.com