Fresh off an Olympic gold and a whirlwind season, the greatest alpine skier of all time opens up about emotional numbness, the pressure of expectations, and why she’s shifting gears to chase new limits in giant slalom and super-G.
Mikaela Shiffrin barely paused after the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics before diving into her next chapter. Back home in Colorado, the 31-year-old most decorated skier in history has been traveling for media appearances — but she carved out time at Copper Mountain to ski with a group of girls aged 11-14 from the elevateHER nonprofit, partnered with Share Winter.
The experience left a deep impression. Shiffrin spent 20 minutes patiently teaching one 12-year-old how to make turns, emphasizing joy, uniqueness, and getting kids outdoors rather than pushing everyone toward elite racing.
“We don’t necessarily need more professional ski racers,” Shiffrin said. “We need to develop the pipeline. We need people to just enjoy the sports for what they are — to get outdoors, breathe the open air, and move their bodies that way.”
She reflected that this season feels different: she’s thinking more about life beyond racing and connecting with the snow sports community on a deeper level.
“Up until this point it’s been ‘come watch me race’… but the snow sports community is about celebrating everybody’s uniqueness and all of their different passions.”
The girls were starstruck. “She’s just such a cool person,” said 14-year-old Zia Ziaknaer. “I admire her determination and how she worked so hard.” Another, 13-year-old Amalia McNeirney, who balances skiing with mountain biking passion, felt inspired: “Watching her pursue her dreams from such a young age reminds me of myself.”
Shiffrin also used the day to share her evolving perspective on her own career.
In a candid admission, she revealed she believes she has reached her limit in slalom — her signature discipline where she has dominated for years and won Olympic gold in 2026.
“I think I’ve reached my ceiling in how fast I can ski slalom,” Shiffrin said. “I just can’t ski it faster than I have been. I used to think you can always get faster, but I don’t know that I personally have the capability to do that anymore.”
That realization has made motivation trickier. “The feeling of hitting your ceiling — that’s the most limiting thing for motivation.”
Instead, she’s turning her curiosity toward giant slalom and super-G, where she still sees room for growth and unknowns that excite her: “I’m really curious to see where that can go.”
Shiffrin is still processing the intense emotional weight of the Olympic season, admitting she hasn’t cried since the Games. She described periods of emotional numbness tied to the trauma and high stakes.
“The toughest thing was that the whole world expected me to win. And the downside is the criticism that comes if I don’t.”
To handle the pressure, she relied on sports psychology and a tight-knit team that created a “supportive bubble.” Her biggest growth, she said, was building that unified support system and overcoming fears of isolation.
Looking back across four Olympic appearances, Shiffrin barely recognizes the athlete she was in Sochi as a teenager. Her takeaway? A profound appreciation for the people around her and the shared human experience on the mountain.
At Copper Mountain, Shiffrin wasn’t just coaching — she was reminding everyone, including herself, that passion and enjoyment matter most. Whether inspiring young girls to chase their own dreams (on skis, bikes, or whatever lights them up) or redefining her own limits, the GOAT is proving that greatness evolves.
Shiffrin may have hit a ceiling in one discipline, but she’s far from done writing her legendary story. The next chapter looks faster, freer, and focused on new horizons — both on and off the slopes.
