KILLINGTON, Vt. — American skier Mikaela Shiffrin said she suffered an abrasion on her left hip and that something ''stabbed'' her when she crashed during her second run of a World Cup giant slalom race Saturday, doing a flip and sliding into the protective fencing.
Shiffrin stayed down on the edge of the course for quite some time as the ski patrol attended to her. She was taken off the hill on a sled and waved to the cheering crowd before going to a clinic for evaluation.
''Not really too much cause for concern at this point, I just can't move,'' she said later in a video posted on social media. ''I have a pretty good abrasion and something stabbed me. ... I'm so sorry to scare everybody. It looks like all scans so far are clear.''
She plans to skip the slalom race Sunday, writing on Instagram she will be ''cheering from the sideline.''
The 29-year-old was leading after the first run of the GS and charging for her 100th World Cup win. She was within sight of the finish line, five gates onto Killington's steep finish pitch, when she an outside edge. She hit a gate and did a somersault before sliding into another gate. The fencing slowed her momentum as she came to an abrupt stop.
Reigning Olympic GS champion Sara Hector of Sweden won in a combined time of 1 minute, 53.08 seconds. Zrinka Ljutic of Croatia was second and Swiss racer Camille Rast took third. The Americans saw Paula Moltzan and Nina O'Brien finish fifth and sixth.
''It's just so sad, of course, to see Mikaela crash like that and skiing so well,'' Hector said on the broadcast after her win. ''It breaks my heart and everybody else here.''
The crash was a surprise for everyone. Shiffrin rarely DNFs — ski racing parlance for ''did not finish.'' In 274 World Cup starts, she DNF'd only 18 times. The last time she DNF'd in GS was January 2018.