Her gaffe at the Beijing Games was like watching a 94 percent free throw shooter clang one off the back rim. And as she skied to the edge of the course and lifted her goggles, you could see the shock in Shiffrin’s eyes. Because she knows that in the Olympics, unlike in most basketball games, you don’t get many extra shots to make up for a mistake.
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Fortunately for Shiffrin, her best event, the slalom, will be contested Wednesday morning (Tuesday night in the United States). Moreover, it was evident after Monday’s disappointment that Shiffrin is no longer the wide-eyed 18-year-old who at the 2014 Sochi Games became the youngest Olympic slalom champion. Shiffrin, who debuted on the World Cup tour 11 years ago, is now at midcareer (she turns 27 next month) and in recent seasons has had to resurrect herself from injury, performances below her standards and much worse. Last week was the two-year anniversary of the accidental death of Shiffrin’s father, Jeff, who led his only daughter down a slope during her first day on skis and never stopped guiding her.
Difficult comebacks, not just medal ceremonies and cheering crowds, have become a regular part of Shiffrin’s life. And she knows that well. Just ask her.
Tellingly, Shiffrin did not seem confused, anxious or overly downtrodden after Monday’s swift failure, when she went down seconds into a race she was one of the favorites to win. She did not second guess herself, which she did when she surprisingly finished off the podium in the slalom at the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics. She did not blame a new racecourse in China that no one had competed on before Monday, nor did she cite the atypical snow conditions (100 percent artificial snow).
The racer who almost never falls just fell at the worst time.
“People are going to say, what went wrong?” she said in the finish area. “But the easier thing to say is I skied a couple good turns and I skied one turn a bit wrong and I paid the hardest consequence for that.