Six weeks ago, Mikaela Shiffrin didnāt 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 , where something punctured her in the side ā still a mystery ā and caused severe trauma to her oblique muscles.
Itās been a demanding and difficult road back for the fast-healing Shiffrin, who plans to make her World Cup return at a slalom race in Courchevel, France, next Thursday. Her journey to the start gate included preventative surgery to ward off an infection inside a wound that penetrated through three layers of muscle to hours of arduous rehab to reactivate those crucial core muscles to feeling comfortable again weaving through a course.
Thatās why Shiffrinās focus is solely on progression, not so much her pursuit of World Cup win No. 100. Given where she was, just to make it back this quick from an injury thatās not exactly common for a ski racer and resulted in her physical therapist consulting with baseball and hockey teams, itās already a big win.
āItās going to be a little bit nerve-wracking, to be honest,ā Shiffrin said of her return in an interview with The Associated Press. āThese past six weeks, every step itās like, āGeez, should this be hurting less? Should I be better at this? Should I be more tolerant of the pain?ā There are so many questions that come up in your mind of basically whether or not youāre doing well enough.
āBut when we take a step back and look where we are now ... itās pretty exciting.ā
What happened on the crash
Shiffrin has repeatedly watched the crash. Sheās analyzed precisely what happened in a race where she was leading and looked headed toward milestone win No. 100.
Long story short: She put too much weight on her inside ski on an aggressive line.
āI was like, āIāll be hanging on for dear life, but itās going to be fast,'ā said the 29-year-old Shiffrin, whose plans for the world championships in Austria next month include racing the slalom and giant slalom.
Shiffrin hit the snow, smashed into the gate, toppled over her skis and slid into the protective fence. She suffered no serious bone or ligament damage but something impaled her.
She's scrutinized over what the object might have been, with theories ranging from her ski pole to a piece of the gate. Fans have even reached out to offer their thoughts.
Only later did she find out just how close of call it was ā whatever stabbed her nearly punctured her abdominal wall and her colon.
āA millimeter from pretty catastrophic,ā Shiffrin said. āThen it was like, āYour colon is intact. This is just a hole in your side. Thatās fine.ā Iām like, āBut thereās still a hole in my side and I canāt move.āā
The long days of recovery
First, some rest. Then, a plan once the inflammation subsided around the oblique muscles, which are located on the sides of the abdomen and are instrumental for twisting and bending.
This was such a unique injury to ski racing. Her physical therapist, Regan Dewhirst, reached out to the training staffs of the Los Angeles Angels and the Edmonton Oilers for advice, since baseball and hockey players have had their share of oblique ailments. Each helped provide a framework for Shiffrinās recovery.
āThe biggest thing was to make sure you get her moving in a pain-free way as quickly as possible,ā Dewhirst said. āGet the muscle activated properly and then once itās activating, you need to try to introduce these sport-specific motions as soon as you can.ā
They took the necessary steps at Shiffrinās pace. If she felt good, they were aggressive. If she needed to rest, they rested. She was looking at about a 6-to-12 week timeline for a return but really no one knew for sure.
āEvery step of the way, itās gone as well as we could hope,ā said Shiffrin, whoās engaged to Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, the with an injury. āWeāve been pushing, too.ā
Back on snow
Shiffrin returned to skiing on Jan. 1. A few simple runs to āget at those ski-specific motions you really canāt simulate in a controlled gym space,ā Dewhirst said.
Two weeks later, Shiffrin was back in the slalom gates. Again, some very easy turns to start.
āJust slowly taking on the progression and not throwing in too much into the fire at once,ā said Shiffrin, a two-time Olympic champion who on the U.S. ski team after the comeback of . āItās kind of hard to explain to people just how much you put your body through just to make one single slalom or GS turn, let alone 55-to-60 in a row.ā
Earlier this week, she had a little hiccup that sent her heart racing. She hit a pile of snow in a training run, one ski slid into the other and she nearly fell.
It was reminiscent of her crash.
āThat was scary,ā Shiffrin said. āBut I was also like, āThere it is.ā I have to desensitize to those little things again because you donāt ski a full-length race course without some little moments of like, āThat was kind of scary.āā
Off to Europe
Shiffrin departs for Europe this week and the plan is to increase the intensity ahead of the Courchevel competition.
But that plan remains fluid.
āIf for whatever reason something crops up and itās not quite there yet, no big deal," Dewhirst said. "This is an evolving continuum.ā
Shiffrin wonāt be racing any downhill events this season but is leaving the door open for an occasional super-G.
āIt depends on how much we can fit into a really short time crunch,ā Shiffrin explained. āFor me, itās just been put your head down and do the work and just do this as well as you can.ā
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AP skiing:
Pat Graham, The Associated Press