SKIING
American Shiffrin wins record 36th World Cup title in slalom
In the last race of 2018, the American added her 36th victory. Shiffrin previously shared the record with Austria’s Marlies Raich, who, competing as Marlies Schild, won 35 times before retiring in 2014.
“She is my biggest idol beside Bode Miller,” Shiffrin said. “When I was young I wanted to be the best skier in the world. I was always watching Marlies, she was a legend. To me, she is the best slalom skier. I wouldn’t be here without her. For me, she has this record for ever.”
Only Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark has won more World Cup slaloms, 40, between 1974 and 1987.
While it seems only a matter of time before Shiffrin will reach the 40-win mark as well, she was already looking forward to her own best marks being bettered.
“Records are meant to be broken. Somebody is going to come and break my record, I hope, because that means maybe I have inspired someone as much as Marlies inspired me,” Shiffrin said. “If I can inspire any young athlete as much as she inspired me, then I did my job in this sport.”
Watched by 10,200 fans on the Zauberberg, Shiffrin built on a big first-run lead to beat Petra Vlhova of Slovakia by 0.29 seconds and Wendy Holdener of Switzerland by 0.38 for her 51st career victory.
By winning Saturday, Shiffrin also became the first skier, male or female, to win 15 World Cup races in a single calendar year, moving one victory past men’s overall champion Marcel Hirscher of Austria, who has won 14 times in 2018.
Shiffrin and Hirscher beat the four-decade-old record set by Stenmark. But while Shiffrin competed in 27 events this year, Stenmark had only 19 races to gather his total of 13 victories in 1979, when the World Cup did not yet include super-G races, parallel slaloms or city events.
The only World Cup slalom Shiffrin didn’t win in 2018 was when she failed to finish in Switzerland in January, the last event before the Pyeongchang Olympics.
In South Korea, she surprisingly missed out on a medal after placing fourth in her strongest discipline, but Shiffrin quickly regained her dominance and has been unbeaten since the World Cup resumed in March.
Shiffrin has won 11 of the last 12, and 27 of the last 33 World Cup slaloms she competed in.
“It’s a little bit unbelievable, in every meaning of the word,” said the 23-year-old Shiffrin about her achievements in 2018.