Mikaela Shiffrin is ready to get back on the slopes. The 29-year-old, two-time Olympic gold medalist exclusively announced on the Jan. 23 episode of TODAY that she is returning to competition after injuring herself last year during a race.
Over a month after she crashed and suffered an oblique puncture wound in Killington, Vermont, Mikaela Shiffrin has announced that she’ll return to the racecourse on January 30, 2025 for the Courchevel,
Mikaela Shiffrin is making her return to the slopes for the World Cup event in Courchevel, France, on Jan. 30. It will be her first competitive event
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
On Nov. 30, Shiffrin crashed in a giant slalom run in Killington, Vermont, while bidding to become the first Alpine skier to reach 100 World Cup victories. She tumbled over and sustained a puncture wound seven centimeters deep into the right side of her abdomen, tearing into her external and internal oblique muscles.
Mikaela Shiffrin will make her return from injury when she races at a World Cup event in France next week, the two-time Olympic champion announced.
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 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.
Mikaela Shiffrin didn’t have the core strength to even rise out of a chair. A sneeze or a laugh brought on instant pain. That was all due to a serious crash in a giant slalom race on Nov. 30 in Killington,
Members of the Sackler family who own OxyContin-maker Purdue Pharma, and the company itself, have agreed to pay up to $7.4 billion to settle lawsuits over the toll of the powerful prescription painkiller. And Vermont would get a share of that money.
More than $10 million in federal funding is on its way to New Hampshire from the Northern Border Regional Commission to support economic and infrastructure development.