Mikaela Shiffrin Siblings: All About Taylor Shiffrin

Mikaela Shiffrin PHOTO/NBC
Mikaela Shiffrin is an American alpine ski racer widely regarded as one of the greatest female skiers in history.
Born on March 13, 1995, in Vail, Colorado, she grew up in a family deeply immersed in skiing.
Her parents, Eileen and the late Jeff Shiffrin, were both former ski racers who passed their passion for the sport to their children.
Shiffrin began skiing at a young age, quickly rising through the ranks to become a dominant force in World Cup competition and the Olympics.
Siblings
Mikaela has one sibling, an older brother named Taylor Shiffrin, born in 1992.
Taylor, who is about two and a half years her senior, shares a close bond with Mikaela forged through their shared love of skiing.
As children, Mikaela often followed Taylor everywhere on the slopes, idolizing him and learning from his example.
Taylor pursued skiing at a collegiate level, racing for the University of Denver where he contributed to two NCAA championship teams in 2014 and 2016.
Beyond skiing, he has built a career as a data scientist, entrepreneur, and founder of startups, while occasionally competing in endurance events like mountain bike races.
Career
Shiffrin’s career took off early when she won the U.S. national slalom title as a 15-year-old, becoming the youngest ever to do so.
She made her World Cup debut soon after and claimed her first victory in 2012.
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Specializing primarily in technical events like slalom and giant slalom, she has expanded her prowess across disciplines.
Her breakthrough came at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, where she won gold in slalom at just 18 years old, making her the youngest Olympic slalom champion in history.
She followed with more dominance on the World Cup circuit, securing multiple overall titles and discipline globes.
Despite setbacks, including the sudden loss of her father in 2020 and occasional injuries, Shiffrin has consistently returned stronger.
By the 2025-26 season, she continued adding to her legacy with strong performances in slalom and giant slalom, heading into the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics focused on select events like slalom, giant slalom, and team combined.
Accolades
Shiffrin holds the all-time record for World Cup wins with over 108 victories as of early 2026, surpassing legends like Ingemar Stenmark.
This includes a record 71 slalom wins and numerous others in giant slalom.
She has captured five overall World Cup Crystal Globes and 11 discipline titles, with eight in slalom alone, marking her as the first skier to earn nine season titles in one discipline.
At the Olympic level, she has earned two gold medals—one in slalom at Sochi 2014 and one in giant slalom at PyeongChang 2018—along with a silver.
Her World Championship record stands at 15 medals, including eight golds, four silvers, and three bronzes, with a streak of winning gold at seven consecutive championships from 2013 to 2025.
Additional honors include becoming the first alpine skier to reach 100 World Cup wins and earning widespread recognition as the most successful female alpine skier ever.
