Only two months after suffering a major injury in an accident at Killington, Vermont, American ski racer Mikaela Shiffrin is set to return to World Cup competition next week at Courchevel, France. Shiffrin,
Shiffrin's spent the better part of two months sidelined from ski racing. Now, she's planning her comeback.
Two-time Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin says she will return to World Cup alpine skiing on January 30, exactly two months after she was injured in a hard fall.
Mikaela Shiffrin is set to return to the Alpine Ski World Cup on Thursday, Jan. 30, in Courchevel, France, for what will be her first professional race since sustaining a puncture wound to her right abdomen in a fall back in November.
Mikaela Shiffrin was on the verge of her 100th career victory when she crashed in Killington, Vermont, causing a puncture wound and abdominal tearing
Two-time Olympic gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin will return to the Alpine Ski World Cup on Jan. 30, Shiffrin announced Thursday. The decorated skier, whose 99 World Cup victories are the most of any individual in the sport,
Team USA's Olympics star Mikaela Shiffrin, who was injured in a November giant slalom race, will return to Alpine Ski World Cup competition, she announced Thursday.
Mikaela Shiffrin has recovered from her ski crash two months ago and tells The Associated Press she plans to return to World Cup racing next Thursday at a slalom event in Courchevel, France.
Mikaela Shiffrin is back on snow and skiing regularly again at home in Colorado. When she'll return to racing after an unusual puncture wound to her side remains "a moving target" that probably won't be figured out for another week to 10 days.
After sustaining injuries from a dramatic ski crash in November while chasing her 100th World Cup win. 'I got impaled back in November, and I had about a seven
For the first time since the Baltimore Ravens 27-25 loss to the Buffalo Bills in the Divisional Round of the playoffs, Ravens tight end Mark Andrews spoke publicly about his role in the defeat.