Mikaela Shiffrin closes in on women's record with 81st World Cup victory

Mikaela Shiffrin won the first women's World Cup race of 2023 on Wednesday to move within one victory of Lindsey's Vonn record.

American now 1 win behind Lindsey Vonn, 5 back of Sweden's Stenmark for overall mark

A skier leans to her left and appears to smile as she cuts down the mountain with snow flying up around her skis.
American Mikaela Shiffrin skis down the hill on her way to a World Cup victory on Wednesday in Zagreb, Croatia. (Christophe Pallot/Agence Zoom/Getty Images)

Mikaela Shiffrin felt "really excited" Wednesday after winning the first women's World Cup race of 2023.

And it wasn't because she had just moved within one victory of Lindsey Vonn's record.

"I skied better than I probably ever have," Shiffrin said.

The defending overall champion dealt best with difficult course conditions to dominate a floodlit slalom and raise her career tally to 81 World Cup wins. She could match the best mark Thursday at another slalom on the same course. Live coverage of the second and decisive run begins at 12 p.m. ET on CBCSports.ca, the CBC Sports app and CBC Gem.

American standout Vonn set the women's record of 82 before retiring in 2019. The overall best mark is 86, from Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark.

"I'm happy, I'm incredibly happy. I mean, I had so much fun skiing today and it was really my best skiing both runs today," said Shiffrin, who beat runner-up Petra Vlhova by 0.76 seconds, with the rest of the field finishing more than 1.20 off the pace.

WATCH | Shiffrin wins under the lights in Zagreb:

Mikaela Shiffrin 1 win away from Lindsey Vonn's record after 81st World Cup victory

2 years ago
Duration 3:42
American Mikaela Shiffrin claimed the women's slalom race in Zagreb, Croatia for her 81st career World Cup victory, putting her one win shy of Lindsey Vonn's women's record.

The former overall champion of Slovakia had won the race on the outskirts of the Croatian capital the past three seasons. Vlhova's rise to the top has motivated Shiffrin.

"I feel like I would not be here tonight with skiing like that, if it wasn't for Petra pushing the limits in the last three years. She's been so strong and it has encouraged me to keep working harder and harder and harder," Shiffrin said.

"Nothing less than the best is going to work. I was taking all the risk I needed and made it on the finish and that's just an amazing feeling when it's good enough."

Shiffrin certainly has been more than just good enough in recent weeks.

The four-time overall champion stretched her winning streak to five races, which included three different events: super-G, giant slalom, and slalom.

Only two female racers have won more races in succession: Swiss skier Vreni Schneider won eight in 1988-89 and Germany's Katja Seizinger won six in 1997.

Amelia Smart of Invermere, B.C., was the top Canadian finisher, placing a career-best eighth at 1:39.35. Laurence St-Germain, of Saint-Ferréol-les-Neiges, Que., was 14th (1:39.99) while Toronto's Ali Nullmeyer qualified for the second run but did not finish.

"Really happy with my race," said Smart. "I skied the way I want to ski today, especially in my second run so feel good about that. Our team is skiing really fast right now, and I think tomorrow will be a great race for us."

WATCH | Smart places 8th:

B.C.'s Amelia Smart finishes 8th in slalom World Cup in Zagreb

2 years ago
Duration 1:19
Amelia Smart of Invermere, B.C. cracked the top 10 at the FIS World Cup slalom event in Zagreb, Croatia on Wednesday.

Earlier, Shiffrin won back-to-back slaloms in Finland to start the 2022-23 season.

On Wednesday, Shiffrin stood up to the challenge to defend her first-run lead as the last starter on the deteriorating Crveni Spust course.

While no racers remained without mistakes, Shiffrin never got in real trouble in her final run. She even won time on Vlhova at every split and celebrated with both arms up after crossing the finish, followed by two fist pumps.

"That was the most exciting thing of the day, that I felt so good skiing when it's a bit softer. The victory is incredible, but I'm more happy with how I feel, it's just calm," Shiffrin said.

The American said she used new skis which she and her equipment supplier Atomic developed over the past two years. The new set-up is meant to give her a better control on softer courses that have been injected with water and salt — like the one in Zagreb.

Shiffrin drew an unfavourable start number and began the opening run last among the top-seven ranked racers. But she did best to keep the line between the gates, despite being bounced around by ruts and waves in the rather soft snow surface after days with temperatures of 10 to 15 degrees C.

Shiffrin led Anna Swenn Larsson by 0.23 seconds. The Swede won her first World Cup slalom in November and dropped to third after the final run, swapping places with Vlhova.

"These kinds of conditions have been challenging for me, in the last two years especially. But tonight, it was just a really perfect combination of the equipment with my skiing," Shiffrin said.

"I'm just thankful when it goes well. In the last five races it went really went well. So, now I am just on a groove and keep riding the wave until the wave is over."

With files from CBC Sports

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