Mikaela Shiffrin has added another historic chapter to her unparalleled alpine skiing career, securing a record-tying sixth overall FIS Crystal Globe to cap a dominant 2025-26 World Cup season. Yet, rather than basking in the milestone, the 31-year-old American superstar says it is her enduring curiosity that continues to propel her forward.
Shiffrin clinched the prestigious overall title on March 25, 2026, during the final giant slalom of the World Cup Finals in Hafjell, Norway. Needing only a top-15 finish to mathematically secure the globe ahead of her closest rival, Germany’s Emma Aicher, she delivered a composed second run to place 11th — enough to finish the season with 1,410 points, 87 ahead of Aicher.
The achievement ties her with Austrian legend Annemarie Moser-Pröll for the most overall Crystal Globes in women’s history. It also marked her 18th career crystal globe overall, coming on the heels of a record-extending 110th World Cup victory and a dominant slalom season in which she claimed her ninth discipline globe with nine wins out of ten races.
In post-race reflections, Shiffrin described the moment as deeply emotional, acknowledging both the dream fulfilled and the awareness that such successes may not come indefinitely at this stage of her career. “It’s quite emotional. I always put the overall globe as the big, big goal,” she said. “I’m also coming to a point in my career where it might not happen again. I’m not taking this for granted right now.”
What keeps the most decorated skier of all time motivated, however, goes beyond records and trophies. In recent interviews, Shiffrin pointed to curiosity as her primary driving force.
“I think mainly it’s the curiosity about how much better I can get,” she explained. She expressed particular interest in pushing her limits further in giant slalom and super-G, describing the past season as a “stepping stone” in those events despite her historic slalom dominance.
This mindset has defined much of Shiffrin’s approach in recent years. After overcoming challenges, including a difficult period at the 2022 Beijing Olympics, she rebounded strongly with Olympic success in Milano Cortina 2026 and now another overall title. Her curiosity, she noted, extends beyond technical improvement on the snow — it encompasses the broader journey of growth, both as an athlete and as a person.
“At some point, I may feel like I’m just not curious anymore about any of it,” she reflected, pausing as if considering the weight of that possibility.
Shiffrin’s 2025-26 campaign was one of remarkable consistency and excellence. She dominated slalom while delivering steady top-six results in giant slalom and contributing points in speed events, showcasing the all-around prowess required to claim the overall crown in a highly competitive field.
As she looks ahead, the question remains whether this sixth globe marks the beginning of a new chapter or the continuation of an already legendary one. With the curiosity that has carried her through more than a decade at the top, Shiffrin shows no signs of slowing down — only a desire to explore what else she might achieve on and off the slopes.
Fans and fellow athletes have celebrated the accomplishment as yet another testament to her status as the greatest alpine skier of her generation. For Shiffrin herself, the crystal globe is not an endpoint, but another stepping stone in a career still driven by questions, possibilities, and an insatiable drive to improve.
Full story and reactions continue to unfold as Shiffrin reflects on a season many are calling one of her finest yet.
