In a raw and deeply emotional interview, Olympic gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin has opened up about the agonizing final hours she spent with her father, Jeff Shiffrin, before his tragic death in 2020 — including the devastating moment she heard his heart stop beating.
The five-time Olympic medalist sat down with Anderson Cooper on his CNN podcast All There Is for a Father’s Day special, where she detailed the family’s heartbreak following Jeff’s fatal accident. Jeff Shiffrin, 65, fell from the roof of the family’s home in Edwards, Colorado, suffering severe head trauma.
Shiffrin, who rushed back from Italy to be by her father’s side, described crawling into bed with him as he lay on life support. In an emotional recounting that brought her to tears, she told Cooper: “I heard his heart stop.”
She recalled lying with him for hours in what she knew would be their final moments together. “You talk about feeling your dad with you and that’s something that I don’t feel,” Shiffrin shared, expressing the ongoing struggle with grief six years later. She also reflected on watching security footage of the accident in search of answers, a step that underscored her search for closure.
Jeff Shiffrin was not only a devoted father but a constant presence in Mikaela’s storied career — a passionate ski racer himself who helped shape her path to greatness. His sudden loss left the family shattered, with Shiffrin admitting she once questioned whether she could ever return to the slopes that defined her life.
Yet, the champion found strength through the pain. In February 2026 at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, Shiffrin captured slalom gold in an emotional breakthrough, describing it as the first time she could truly “accept this reality” without her dad by her side.
Grief, Shiffrin emphasized, isn’t something to “fix” — it’s something to navigate. “I wish my dad could see who I’ve become,” she said, capturing the bittersweet mix of pride and absence that continues to fuel her.
Her vulnerability has struck a chord with fans worldwide, many of whom have shared their own stories of loss in response to the interview. As one of the most accomplished athletes of her generation, Shiffrin’s willingness to share these intimate struggles humanizes the Olympic icon and highlights the universal weight of love, memory, and moving forward.
In a world that often celebrates only the victories, Shiffrin’s courage in revisiting her deepest pain reminds us that true strength often lies in the quiet, heartbreaking moments behind the medals.
