With the 2025-26 FIS Alpine World Cup Finals just days away in Lillehammer, Norway, speculation has swirled: Is this the end? Will Mikaela Shiffrin hang up her skis after one final showdown on the crystal globe stage?
The answer from the GOAT herself? Not even close.
In recent interviews and on-hill comments — including a firm shutdown of Swiss media rumors just yesterday (March 21, 2026) — the 31-year-old American legend has made it crystal clear: there is no retirement tour, no farewell plan, and definitely no exit after the finals.
“Four years feels like a lifetime, so it feels so far away,” Shiffrin told Sports Illustrated when pressed on the 2030 Olympics. “But I know how fast time can go. So I won’t say no, but I’m not going to say yes either.”
Translation: She’s leaving every door wide open.
Fresh off her commanding slalom gold at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics — where she smashed a 1.50-second margin and claimed her third individual Olympic gold — Shiffrin has kept the pedal down. She’s already back racing super-G post-Games, holds a commanding lead in the overall standings (poised to tie the women’s record for most overall titles), and shows zero signs of slowing.
For now, the focus is laser-sharp: finish this season strong, defend her dominance in slalom (where she’s chasing even more records), and compete at the World Cup Finals without the weight of a goodbye hanging over her.
“I’ve always said the skiing is what I love,” Shiffrin has emphasized repeatedly. No scripted ending. No forced decision. Just an athlete who still burns for the gates, the speed, and the fight.
The World Cup Finals will crown champions, hand out globes, and close one chapter. But for Mikaela Shiffrin? It’s not the finale — it’s simply the next race.
The queen isn’t retiring. She’s reloading.
The slopes — and the record books — still have more Mikaela magic coming. ⛷️🇺🇸🔥
