The duo trained on the Eclipse downhill racecourse at Courchevel on Monday. Hours before Shiffrin’s victory, Kilde claimed the World Cup men’s downhill season-long title, 14 months after he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee. He added the super-G discipline title the next day.
“It’s been wonderful to be able to see Aleks and it’s been a very exciting week for him, too,” Shiffrin said. “There’s just better energy going around us and that’s been quite special. Just being able to talk with him has helped realign some perspectives.
“There’s a lot of things that I have to really be grateful for, especially with everything that has been going on with Ukraine over these last weeks. There’s some serious, real crap going on in the world this year.”
Shiffrin said that the potential for a military conflict in Ukraine was a constant backdrop in the Olympic athletes’ village.
“The Olympics were an interesting place to be, it was kind of insane to be there competing when we also knew that Russia was lining the borders of the Ukraine,” she said. “And then seeing some of the Ukrainian athletes there and wondering what they were thinking and then it was just like, ‘OK, we’re just going to have the Olympics now.’