In a candid revelation that underscores her evolution as one of alpine skiing’s most resilient icons, Mikaela Shiffrin has unveiled a laser-focused blueprint for the 2025-26 World Cup season: an all-in commitment to slalom and giant slalom (GS), with downhill firmly off the table and super-G as a potential wildcard. The two-time Olympic champion shared these insights during Atomic’s annual Media Day on October 9, speaking exclusively to SnowBrains amid the crisp autumn air of the Austrian Alps.
“No Downhill,” Shiffrin stated bluntly, her voice carrying the weight of hard-earned wisdom from two injury-plagued campaigns. At 30 years old and with a record 101 World Cup victories under her belt, the American phenom is charting a path that prioritizes technical mastery over speed-event risks, especially as the Milan-Cortina Olympics loom in February 2026.
This isn’t a retreat—it’s a recalibration. Shiffrin’s storied career has long been defined by her dominance in the technical disciplines. She’s claimed 60 slalom podiums and 35 GS triumphs, disciplines where her precision and adaptability shine brightest. Yet, the past two seasons tested her limits: a January 2024 crash in Cortina’s Trofana di Olympia Downhill overstretched a knee tendon, sidelining her for 44 days; and a November 2024 GS tumble at Killington, Vermont, that punctured her abdomen and triggered months of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The Killington incident, in particular, lingered like a shadow, prompting her to skip GS defenses at the 2025 World Championships in Saalbach-Hinterglemm and fueling raw admissions of “soul-crushing” fear in a Players’ Tribune essay.
“Coming to terms with how much fear I have doing an event that I loved so dearly only 2 months ago has been soul-crushing,” Shiffrin wrote in February 2025, opting instead for slalom and the team combined event—where she paired with downhill ace Breezy Johnson to snag gold. By season’s end, flashbacks during GS training had ebbed, and she notched career wins 100 and 101 in her core events, signaling a quiet resurgence.
Now, with summer training camps emphasizing GS under her belt, Shiffrin enters the Olympic year “feeling like myself again. “I have Super-G open,” she told SnowBrains, leaving the door ajar for the hybrid speed-technical event where she’s tallied five career wins.dfd68a But downhill? That’s a non-starter, a deliberate sidestep from the high-stakes velocity that once yielded four victories but now evokes too many “what ifs.” Weather unpredictability and the logistical juggle between technical and speed training camps further justify the trim, she explained—echoing sentiments from her pre-2024-25 strategy announcement.
The move reverberates beyond personal strategy. Lindsey Vonn, Shiffrin’s fellow American trailblazer and a seven-time downhill world champion, expressed visible disappointment earlier this year when Shiffrin adjusted her Worlds commitments, prioritizing GS recovery over team combined duties. Vonn, who returned to competition in 2025 after a storied hiatus, had hoped for a speed-powerhouse duo. Yet Shiffrin’s choice underscores a broader ethos in elite skiing: mental fortitude as the ultimate edge.
Experts hail the pivot as Olympic-smart. “Shiffrin’s slalom and GS are her superpower—where she’s untouchable,” says U.S. Ski & Snowboard technical director Kevin Dusenbury. “This focus rebuilds confidence without burnout, positioning her for a medal sweep in Milan.” With the technical events slated early in the Games (GS on February 19, slalom on February 21), her streamlined calendar allows peak prep, unencumbered by downhill’s grueling demands.
Fans and foes alike are buzzing. On X (formerly Twitter), Shiffrin’s announcement sparked a flurry of support: “Content to see her thrive in what she loves most,” posted Denver Post Sports, capturing the sentiment of a racer reclaiming joy. Associated Press correspondent Eric Willemsen quoted her fire: “I feel like I have better skiing to explore, so that is where my motivation is right now. Even Italian outlet Race Ski Magazine mused in Italian: “She wants to shatter every imaginable record in World Cups, Worlds, and Olympics—and she can.
As the season opener nears in Soelden, Austria, on October 26 with GS, Shiffrin’s gaze is fixed forward. No longer chasing every globe, she’s honed in on the “little rewards”—a clean line, a fearless turn, the thrill of rediscovery. In an Olympic year ripe for history, the queen of the gates is betting on herself, one technical carve at a time.