Alpine skiing icon Mikaela Shiffrin has rewritten the record books once again, claiming a dominant gold medal in the women’s slalom at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics—her third Olympic gold and fourth medal overall, making her the most decorated American alpine skier in history.
The 30-year-old U.S. superstar delivered a masterclass on the Tofane course, posting a combined time of 1:39.10 to outpace Switzerland’s Camille Rast (silver, +1.50 seconds) and Sweden’s Anna Swenn-Larsson (bronze, +1.71 seconds). Her margin of victory marked the largest in an Olympic slalom event since Nagano 1998, capping a storybook redemption arc after an eight-year Olympic medal drought since PyeongChang 2018.
Shiffrin’s journey to this pinnacle has been legendary yet laced with challenges. She burst onto the scene as a teenage prodigy, winning slalom gold at Sochi 2014 at just 18—the youngest American alpine medalist ever. She added giant slalom gold and combined silver in PyeongChang 2018, but Beijing 2022 brought heartbreak with multiple DNFs and no individual hardware amid intense scrutiny and personal grief following her father’s death in 2020.
Yet Shiffrin bounced back stronger, shattering World Cup records (surpassing 100 wins), claiming a record eighth World Championship title in 2025, and proving unbreakable resilience. This latest triumph—her first slalom Olympic gold in 12 years—solidifies her as the only American alpine skier with three golds, surpassing legends like Ted Ligety and Andrea Mead Lawrence.
From the Olympics.com profile highlighting her dominance across disciplines to emotional podium tears, Shiffrin’s victory wasn’t just about the medal—it was about conquering doubt, pressure, and time itself. As one outlet put it, she “attacked history” rather than protecting it.
The GOAT debate? Case closed. Mikaela Shiffrin stands alone at the summit. What’s next for the queen of the slopes? 🔥🏔️
