Shiffrin Takes 99th World Cup Win, on Course for 100 on Home Snow

Reuters
By Reuters
November 23, 2024Sports News
share
Shiffrin Takes 99th World Cup Win, on Course for 100 on Home Snow
Lara Colturi of Team Albania takes 2nd place, Mikaela Shiffrin of Team United States takes 1st place, Camille Rast of Team Switzerland takes 3rd place during the Audi FIS Alpine Ski World Cup Women's Slalom, in Gurgl, Austria, on Nov. 23, 2024. (Millo Moravski/Agence Zoom/Getty Images)

Mikaela Shiffrin took a record-extending 99th Alpine skiing World Cup victory in Austria on Saturday, leaving the American perfectly placed to complete her century on home snow in Vermont next weekend.

Shiffrin won the slalom in the resort of Gurgl by a comfortable 0.55 of a second from Italian-born Lara Colturi, who skis for Albania, in second place.

Switzerland’s Camille Rast finished third down the Kirchenkar course.

“I was really nervous on the top,” said double Olympic champion Shiffrin, who was last to leave the start hut for a second run that secured a record-stretching 62nd slalom win.

“I could hear all the other women going down and their teams were cheering, and that always means they had a really good run.

“I’m thinking I don’t think it’s happening today…push, push. It feels really satisfying to have a really great run down that slope. What a wonderful day.”

Killington, Vermont, hosts a women’s giant slalom and slalom on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1.

Shiffrin has won six of the seven World Cup slaloms previously held there.

No skier has won 100 World Cup races and completing the landmark century in the eastern U.S. state would be even more of a celebration for the 29-year-old, who attended ski school there.

“I guess there’s a bit of pressure around it but I’ll try to ignore that,” she said of the 100 mark. “If it happens it’s wonderful, if it doesn’t happen nothing to cry about in the grand scheme.

“But I hope to have a really good performance in front of the home crowd.”

Shiffrin collected a record 87th career World Cup win in March 2023, surpassing retired Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark’s mark that had stood since 1989.