Mikaela Shiffrin didn’t just win the World Cup slalom opener—she declared her Olympic intentions. The American icon claimed her 102nd career victory on Saturday in Lapland, Finland, beating 19-year-old Albanian prodigy Lara Colturi by a commanding 1.66 seconds to kick off her 2025-26 season—and her Milan-Cortina 2026 qualification campaign—in dominant fashion.
Shiffrin, 30, posted a two-run total of 1:48.92, refusing to ease off despite a sizable first-run lead. “I didn’t want to throw it away with risky moves,” she said post-race. “I trusted the work we did all summer.”
Olympic Qualification: On Track and Ahead of Schedule
The path to the 2026 Winter Olympics requires athletes to earn 120 FIS Olympic points in giant slalom and finish in the top 30 of the World Cup rankings by the qualification deadline. Shiffrin’s Levi triumph—her ninth at the venue—adds crucial slalom points and signals she’s already building momentum in both disciplines.
Her last Olympic medal? Gold in giant slalom at PyeongChang 2018, plus a silver in combined. Beijing 2022 was a letdown by her standards, but Shiffrin is laser-focused on redemption in Italy.
“We have an incredible U.S. team—multiple medal contenders,” she told Olympics.com earlier this year. “I don’t want to take a spot I haven’t earned. But I’m fully prepared to fight for it.”
From Injury to Instinct
After a season-ending crash in Killington last year that cost her the slalom globe and two months of racing, Shiffrin admitted to pre-season nerves.
“I was so nervous all week,” she confessed. “But today, my mind and body finally clicked.”
That connection was evident: flawless turns, aggressive lines, and a second run that left the field in the Arctic dust.
Reindeer No. 9 Joins the Herd
Per Levi tradition, Shiffrin received another live reindeer—her ninth. The newest member will join the farm-stabled crew (Rudolph, Sven, Mr. Gru, Ingemar, Sunny, Lorax, Grogu, and Rori) while Shiffrin decides on a name. “I like to meet them first,” she smiled.
Next Stop: Killington
The World Cup caravan heads to Vermont next month, where Shiffrin will race on home snow. With the overall and slalom leads already in hand, the message is clear: the comeback is complete—and the Olympic hunt is on.
Shiffrin now holds 65 slalom wins, more than double any active skier. Milan-Cortina is 20 weeks away. The queen is ready.
