In a quiet moment amid the roar of the Audi FIS Alpine Ski World Cup season opener, Mikaela Shiffrin reached back to a childhood memory that now feels prophetic. The American superstar, who has rewritten record books with 101 World Cup victories and two Olympic gold medals, shared a page from her past that still guides her present.
“When I was a child I wrote in a book of wishes: I want to be Olympic champion,” Shiffrin revealed in a candid FIS Alpine #MemoryBox interview released on the eve of the 2025 Levi slalom. The confession, delivered with her trademark blend of humility and intensity, offered a rare glimpse into the mind of the athlete who has dominated women’s slalom for over a decade.
The entry—penned in a spiral notebook during her early years in Vail, Colorado—came long before the world knew her name. Shiffrin was barely eight years old when she first laced up race skis, already balancing schoolwork with daily training sessions under the watchful eyes of her parents, both former racers. That simple sentence, scrawled in a child’s earnest hand, became the North Star for a career that would see her claim Olympic slalom gold in PyeongChang 2018 at age 22 and giant slalom gold in Beijing 2022.
“It wasn’t about fame or records,” Shiffrin said, reflecting on the note during a press session in Levi. “It was about proving to myself that if I worked hard enough, I could stand on that podium. I still have the book. It reminds me why I started.”
The revelation arrives at a pivotal moment. At 30, Shiffrin enters the 2025/26 season chasing her 102nd World Cup win and a third consecutive Levi slalom title, where she and rival Petra Vlhová have won the last 13 women’s races. Yet beneath the statistics lies a deeper narrative: the fulfillment of a little girl’s dream, now layered with the wisdom of 16 years on the World Cup circuit.
Shiffrin’s journey from that childhood wish to Olympic glory was anything but linear. She debuted on the World Cup at 15, won her first race at 17, and by 18 had become the youngest slalom Olympic champion in history. The pressure that followed—expectations, injuries, and the weight of her own ambition—tested the resolve etched in that notebook. A devastating crash in Killington last season, followed by a mid-campaign reset, only sharpened her focus.
“I reread that page sometimes when things get heavy,” she admitted. “It pulls me back to the joy of skiing, not just the results.”
The #MemoryBox segment, part of FIS Alpine’s initiative to humanize its stars, captured Shiffrin flipping through old photos and medals in her Levi hotel room. Among them: a faded Polaroid of a gap-toothed Shiffrin holding a plastic gold medal from a local NASTAR race. “That was my first ‘Olympic’ podium,” she laughed.
As Saturday’s first run approaches at 11:00 a.m. local time, Shiffrin carries more than bib No. 1. She carries the weight of a childhood promise kept—and the quiet determination to keep writing its next chapter. In Levi, where reindeer trophies await and the Arctic wind bites, the girl who once wished upon a page now races to honor it.
