Mikaela Shiffrin ties World Cup record with 35th slalom win

Mikaela Shiffrin wrote more World Cup history Saturday, winning a slalom for a women's record-equaling 35th career victory in the discipline and 50th win overall.

Victory also marks 50th overall for dominant American skier

From left, silver medallist Petra Vlhova of Slovakia, winner Mikaela Shiffrin of the United States and third-place finisher Frida Hansdotter of Sweden celebrate on the podium after the World Cup women's slalom race in Courchevel, France, on Saturday, (Giovanni Auletta/Associated Press)

Mikaela Shiffrin wrote more World Cup history Saturday in Courchevel, France, winning a slalom for a women's record-equaling 35th career victory in the discipline and 50th win overall.

Shiffrin extended her first-run lead of 0.04 seconds to finish 0.29 clear of Petra Vlhova, who has been runner-up to the American star in all three traditional slaloms this season.

She tied her childhood idol Marlies Schild of Austria with 35 slalom wins on the World Cup circuit. Schild's final slalom victory, in December 2013, was achieved at the age of 32. Shiffrin turns 24 in March.

Shiffrin is also the youngest of the eight skiers, four men and four women, to win 50 World Cup races across all disciplines. Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark's 86 wins is the record.

WATCH | Mikaela Shiffrin make slalom history:

Mikaela Shiffrin ties World Cup slalom record

6 years ago
Duration 0:44
Mikaela Shiffrin ties a women's World Cup record 35 wins in slalom after taking top spot on the podium in Courcheval, France.

"It's so distracting that they give out those numbers for me," Shiffrin said in a post-race interview. "I was trying as hard as I could not to focus on that today."

Olympic slalom champion Frida Hansdotter was third Saturday, trailing Shiffrin by 0.37.

Shiffrin has won every slalom race since her surprise fourth-placed finish at the Olympics in February.

Canada's Erin Mielzynski, 28, skied to an eighth-place finish, earning her 18th career top-10 on the World Cup circuit.

"I'm happy with my result, I'm happy with eighth. In my first run, I skied the top section quite well, I was a little bit passive coming out of the pitch so I lost a little bit of time there. I'm disappointed that I moved back on the second run, but I'm happy with the way my skiing is going and I'm ready to find a higher gear for the next races," said Mielzynski.

Luck on Shiffrin's side

She said she was "maybe a bit lucky today" after overcoming a rare error early in her first run. Shiffrin lost speed through a combination of gates, but made up time lower down the Courchevel course to edge ahead of Vlhova.

"I don't know how I snuck away with the lead in the first run. Petra skied better than I did," Shiffrin said.

Shiffrin's seventh win this season, from just 11 races started, earned 100 World Cup points. It extended her lead in the overall standings to a massive 501 points over second-placed Vlhova.

In the World Cup prize money table, Shiffrin's $352,000 US is more than three times any other woman racer.

Shiffrin and Schild are joined in the record book for at least one week before the next slalom at Semmering, Austria.

Though now-retired Schild was a pure slalom specialist — gaining only two World Cup race wins in other disciplines — Shiffrin has already won in every discipline.

Shiffrin is also the two-time defending overall champion while Schild never won a giant Crystal Globe for the season-long title.

Their careers overlapped for a couple of seasons, and Shiffrin beat Schild into the silver-medal position when she won Olympic slalom gold at the 2014 Sochi Games.

Shiffrin's reward over a brief holiday break is to spend time with her French boyfriend, Mathieu Faivre, who competes in giant slalom.

"I'm going to see Mat tomorrow [Sunday], hopefully," she said. "We might be able to ski together a little bit."