As the Winter Olympics loom just days away, Norwegian alpine speed star Aleksander Aamodt Kilde—fiancé to skiing superstar Mikaela Shiffrin—is getting candid about the highs of his unstoppable prime and the grueling road back from a career-threatening injury.
In a heartfelt reflection featured in ESPN’s “On The Edge: World Cup Ski Racing” series (with the first episodes now streaming), the 33-year-old looked back on his dominant 2021, 2022, and 2023 seasons. Those years saw him at the absolute peak—untouchable in speed events, crowned overall World Cup champion in 2020-21, and claiming two podiums (including super-G bronze) at the 2022 Beijing Olympics.
“Skiing in World Cup is make it or break it,” Kilde shared. “’21, ’22, ’23, when my prime was basically… it was a fun time and probably the best time in my life. Feeling unbreakable basically.”
That invincible feeling shattered in January 2024 during a horrific crash in the Wengen downhill. The wreck left him with severe injuries: a deep cut and nerve damage in his right calf, torn ligaments in his left shoulder, surgeries, and even a bout of sepsis. He was sidelined for 22 months—nearly two full seasons—of intense rehab and uncertainty.
Yet Kilde refused to let the setback define him. Building mental and physical resilience, he targeted a 2025-26 comeback. Originally planning a December return, he accelerated his timeline and made an emotional debut at the Stifel Copper Cup Super-G in Copper Mountain, Colorado, in late November 2025—finishing 24th and earning precious points. Shiffrin was there in the finish area, sharing a powerful moment of support as the couple leaned on each other through their shared trials.
“It’s been make it or break it,” he noted of the sport’s unforgiving nature, adding that the injury period was toughest not just from physical pain, but from the sheer uncertainty.
The road hasn’t been smooth since. Persistent back issues forced him to withdraw from the Kitzbühel Super-G in January 2026, despite strong recent training blocks. Kilde stressed a key principle: “Athletes should not compete unless they feel 100 percent fit.” His team remains optimistic about recovery in time for the Olympics.
Now, with Milano Cortina 2026 just days from opening, Kilde enters as more of an underdog than the favorite he once was—yet his story of grit, gratitude, and unbreakable partnership with Shiffrin inspires. The power couple, both eyeing strong showings on the Olympic stage, continue to be each other’s rock.
From feeling unbreakable to rebuilding piece by piece, Kilde’s journey reminds fans why winter sports legends endure: it’s about the fight, the love, and the magic of coming back stronger.
