Mikaela Shiffrin is opening up about the moment that helped her reset before winning Olympic slalom gold in Milano-Cortina.

Speaking on TODAY, Shiffrin said she had an “almost out-of-body experience” at the start-gate before her second run. The moment came after she watched the skier ahead of her miss a gate, bringing her back to her disappointing performance at the 2022 Beijing Olympics.

“My biggest fear going into the Games was that I would feel really isolated and alone,” Shiffrin said.

But, thanks to her team, that’s not how she felt on the Italian slopes last month. 

“They made me feel very supported and feel very together,”

Shiffrin said of her backers. “It felt like they were skiing it with me.”

The 31-year-old went on to complete a clean second run and top the Olympic slalom podium, earning her third career individual gold medal. The victory only padded Shiffrin’s already-stacked resume, which spans a record 110 World Cup wins and a record-tying six overall World Cup titles.

Will Olympic Skier Mikaela Shiffrin Compete in the Next Winter Olympics?

While she remains at the top of her game, questions still surround Shiffrin’s future — especially when it comes to participating in the 2030 Winter Games in the French Alps.

“We look forward to seeing you at the next Winter Olympics,” TODAY anchor Craig Melvin told her with a smile, closing out the interview.

“Very good, Very good. We’ll talk later,” she laughed.

Laila Edwards is preparing for the next step in her women’s ice hockey career, confirming that she’ll enter the PWHL draft after graduating from Wisconsin this year.

Edwards, a three-time NCAA champion with the Badgers, will graduate on May 9th with a 4.0 GPA and a degree in social welfare. As she recently told Good Morning America, going pro is now the plan, with the PWHL draft set for late June. 

Pro? That’s the plan,” Edwards said. “Entering the draft at the end of June.” 

The forward has played a key role in the Badgers’ recent success, while also helping Team USA win gold at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

The 22-year-old made history in Milan, when she became Team USA’s first Black woman goal-scorer in February’s 5-0 group-stage win over Canada. Opening up about her experience, Edwards pointed to the impact she hopes to have — both on and off the ice.

“I think representation matters, so to be that representation means the world,” she said. “That is the greatest reward, by far… the inspiration. It’s everything.”

Edwards also emphasized how she wants to be remembered as her career continues to develop.

“I’m super competitive. I love winning,” she said. “But I want to leave a legacy about who I was as a role model, a leader, and a person.”

Edwards is expected to be one of the top players to watch in the 2026 PWHL Draft — alongside fellow USA Hockey and Wisconsin teammate Caroline Harvey.

She also added that her long-term plans extend beyond hockey, pointing to a future focused on helping others.

“Whatever I’m going to do with that, I don’t know yet,” Edwards said of her Bachelor’s degree. “Just the idea of helping people who need help.”

Olympic figure skater Alysa Liu credited Taylor Swift for helping her win gold at the 2026 Winter Olympics at this week's iHeartRadio Music Awards.

The 20-year-old athlete presented Swift with the Artist of the Year award and thanked the pop star for narrating a video that introduced Team USA's Blade Angels before the Milan Games in February.

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"She is the GOAT of music," Liu said on stage. "She lent her voice and music by narrating a video introducing me and the other Blade Angels. I gotta say, I think that's why we won."

Swift appeared visibly moved by the comment. She covered her face with her hands and blushed as cameras captured her reaction alongside fiancé Travis Kelce.

The Olympic video featured Liu, Amber Glenn, and Isabeau Levito. In it, Swift called them "three American showgirls on ice," referencing her latest album The Life of a Showgirl.

Swift praised each skater's unique story, highlighting how Liu walked away from skating at 16 after the 2022 Beijing Games, before returning on her own terms.

"Joy fuels her now," Swift said. "Every jump, a celebration."

Liu won two gold medals at the Milan Olympics. She captured the women's individual singles figure skating title, after previously helping Team USA win the team event. The victories marked the first US women's figure skating gold medal since Sarah Hughes in 2002.

Liu wore her signature "halo" bleached hair to the award show, sitting out this week's 2026 World Championships to attend the iHeartRadio Music Awards, alongside other prior obligations. Her fellow Blade Angels Glenn and Levito are currently competing in Group 4 of the women's free skate in Prague.

The 2026 Winter Paralympics opened Friday, marking the Games' 50th anniversary. Team USA sent 72 athletes to compete across six sports, with 20 women set to represent the US in Milan — including the most decorated Winter Paralympian in US history.

This year, Team USA athletes will feature across women's para alpine skiing, para cross-country skiing, para biathlon, and para snowboard. Spanning three generations of Paralympic competition, US women's sports veterans like Oksana Masters will compete alongside first-time competitors like Audrey Crowley.

Here are five US women's sports athletes to watch at the 2026 Winter Paralympics in Milano-Cortina.

Oksana Masters of Team United States participates in training ahead of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympics Games at Tesero Cross-Country Skiing Stadium on March 05, 2026 in Val di Fiemme, Italy.
Biathlon and cross-country skiing athlete Oksana Masters is competing in her eighth Paralympics. (Buda Mendes/Getty Images)

Oksana Masters, Para Cross-Country Skiing and Para Biathlon

Masters holds 19 Paralympic medals total — 14 from the Winter Games and five from the Summer Games. The 36-year-old won seven medals across seven events at Beijing 2022, becoming the first US athlete to achieve the feat.

Born in Ukraine and adopted into a US family, Masters had both legs amputated before the age of 14. She later began her international career with para rowing at London 2012, before transitioning to winter sports at Sochi 2014.

A recent bone infection subsequently sidelined her entire 2024/25 season, returning weeks before the 2026 Games. Despite the setbacks, she dominated the 2025/26 World Cup circuit. She finished no lower than second in any individual cross-country event and won five of her last seven biathlon races. She later claimed the overall FIS Para Cross-Country World Cup title and secured the Big Crystal Globe.

Masters's winter medals include three cross-country and two biathlon golds, while her summer medals include four cycling golds and one rowing bronze.

How to Watch Oksana Masters at the 2026 Winter Paralympics

Masters will launch her 2026 Paralympic campaign with para biathlon on Saturday, March 7th, before competing in para cross-country skiing on March 10th. All events will be broadcast live on Paramount+.

Kendall Gretsch of Team United States participates in a training session ahead of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympics Games at Tesero Cross-Country Skiing Stadium on March 05, 2026 in Val di Fiemme, Italy.
Kendall Gretsch won Team USA's first-ever Olympic or Paralympic biathlon gold medal in 2018. (Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

Kendall Gretsch, Para Biathlon and Para Cross-Country Skiing

Kendall Gretsch made history at PyeongChang 2018 when she topped the 6-kilometer biathlon podium, becoming the first US athlete to win Olympic or Paralympic biathlon gold. She went on to also take gold in the 12-kilometer cross-country race at PyeongChang.

Born with Spina Bifida, multi-season athlete later won triathlon gold at Tokyo 2020. She returned to the snow in 2022 to claim a complete medal set — gold, silver, and bronze — across Beijing's biathlons. She enters Milano-Cortina with seven Paralympic medals under her belt.

"Whatever season I'm in, that's what I am fully focused on," she told the IPC ahead of the 2026 Winter Games. "It is one sport at a time and focusing on that versus trying to do everything all year long."

This year, the 33-year-old finished second behind Masters in the 2025/26 cross-country World Cup and fourth in the biathlon World Cup. She holds 34 world championship medals across triathlon, cross-country skiing, and biathlon — including 19 gold.

How to Watch Kendall Gretsch at the 2026 Winter Paralympics

Gretsch will open her 2026 Paralympic run with para biathlon on Saturday, March 7th, before competing in para cross-country skiing on March 10th. All events will be broadcast live on Paramount+.

Brenna Huckaby of Team USA snowboards ahead of the 2026 Winter Paralympics, where men and women train for Para Snowboard Cross at Cortina Para Snowboard Park in Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy, on March 6, 2026.
2022 gold medalist Brenna Huckaby won a court injunction to compete in Beijing. (Mauro Ujetto/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Brenna Huckaby, Para Snowboard

30-year-old para snowboard legend Brenna Huckaby holds three Paralympic gold medals and one bronze. After losing her leg to bone cancer at 14, Huckaby discovered snowboarding and quickly excelled in the sport.

Huckaby won two golds at PyeongChang 2018. However, the IPC excluded the LL-1 class from 2022's snowboard events, effectively banning Huckaby and other athletes with severe lower-limb disabilities from competing. While the IPC initially barred her from participating as an LL-2 athlete, the Louisiana native fought the ruling and eventually won a court injunction in Germany. Hitting the slopes in Beijing, she went on to claim gold in banked slalom and bronze in snowboard cross.

Huckaby enters the Milano-Cortina games with five world championships and two ESPY awards in addition to her Paralympic medal count.

How to Watch Brenna Huckaby at the 2026 Winter Paralympics

Huckaby kicks off her 2026 Paralympic run with para snowboard cross on Saturday, March 7th, before dropping in for para snowboard slalom on March 14th. All events will be broadcast live on Paramount+.

2026 Winter Paralympics athlete Audrey Crowley of Team USA in action during the FIS Para Alpine World Ski Championships Women´s Giant Slalom Standing on February 8, 2025 in Maribor, Slovenia.
First-time Paralympian Audrey Crowley won giant slalom bronze at the 2025 World Championships. (Marcus Hartmann/Getty Images)

Audrey Crowley, Para Alpine Skiing

Born without her lower right arm, 19-year-old Paralympic debutant Audrey Crowley first gained attention for skiing as a second-grader. And last month, she reached the podium in two World Cup downhill races.

Crowley finished the 2024/25 World Cup season with two podium finishes in giant slalom. She took bronze in giant slalom and placed fifth in slalom at world championships, before officials canceled her three additional events.

"It really is that peak of ski racing for me, having that exhilaration, the jumps, the big long turns," the Colorado native said ahead of this weekend's Winter Games. "Everyone is just starting to arrive at the [Olympic and Paralympic] village. We've been trading pins, eating at the dining hall together."

How to Watch Audrey Crowley at the 2026 Winter Paralympics

Crowley opens her 2026 Paralympic alpine skiing campaign with downhill standing on Saturday, March 7th, before kicking off Super-G standing on March 9th, giant slalom standing on March 10th, and slalom standing on March 14th. All events will be broadcast live on Paramount+.

Margaret Gustafson with Guide Spenser Gustafson of Team USA competing in the slalom race in women´s visually impaired class during FIS Para Alpine Ski World Cup Feldberg 2026 on January 22, 2026 in Feldberg near Titisee-Neustadt, Germany.
16-year-old visually impaired skier Meg Gustafson is Team USA's youngest 2026 Winter Paralympian. (Marcus Hartmann/Getty Images)

Meg Gustafson, Para Alpine Skiing

16-year-old Minnesota native Meg Gustafson was born with a condition affecting the ligaments in her eyes, leading to limited vision. The youngest member of Team USA, Gustafson competes with her older brother Spenser as her guide.

"He's the best brother you could imagine and an amazing skier," Gustafson told Vail Daily in 2025. "I definitely think it brings us closer and we have a little bit of a different way of communicating than some of the other teams."

Skiing talents extend beyond Gustafson's brother, as their father raced alpine skiing for Boston College and taught her to ski at a young age. She finished no lower than fourth in every race she attempted leading up to the 2026 Winter Paralympics, winning seven consecutive FIS races in giant slalom, slalom, and super-G.

"As my dad tells me, I always approach every day like I am that Paralympian that I want to be," she added. "So I just go into the mindset that I can do it."

How to Watch Meg Gustafson at the 2026 Winter Paralympics

Gustafson will compete in all five Paralympic alpine disciplines — slalom, giant slalom, super-G, downhill, and super combined — starting with downhill vision impaired on March 7th. All events will be broadcast live on Paramount+.

The International Paralympic Committee announced record women's participation at the 2026 Winter Paralympics in Milan Cortina, with 160 women's sports athletes competing across six sports.

The milestone marks the fourth consecutive Winter Games to feature a record number of women's sports athletes.

Women's participation increased by 24 athletes compared to the Beijing 2022 Games. The growth demonstrates expanding opportunities for women's Paralympians throughout winter sports.

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"That's fantastic," US wheelchair curler Laura Dwyer said of the record. "As a female, as a mom, as someone injured, it feels amazing to be a part of that, to show the way for others."

Dwyer became paralyzed from the waist down in 2012, after a 1,000-pound tree branch fell on her while on the job as a landscaper. She now competes for Team USA in wheelchair curling.

Five sports are seeing record women's participation this year. Para alpine skiing leads with 57 women's competitors, followed by para cross-country skiing with 65, para biathlon with 45, wheelchair curling with 25, and para snowboard with 15.

Para ice hockey will feature a female athlete for the second consecutive Games and fourth time overall since the sport joined the Paralympic program. The sport remains mixed-gender despite excluding a separate women's competition.

The 2026 Winter Paralympics opened Friday with a ceremony in Verona, Italy, as 616 total athletes from 56 nations compete for 79 medal events through March 15th.

The competition coincides with the Winter Paralympics' 50th anniversary, after the inaugural 1976 Games featured fewer than 200 athletes from 18 countries competing in just two sports.

Women's para ice hockey will not compete at the 2026 Winter Paralympics in Italy, despite a men's tournament taking place. Both athletes and the associated governing bodies have now shifted their focus to the 2030 Paralympic Games in the French Alps.

The sport reached a major milestone in August 2025 when Slovakia hosted the first-ever women's Para Ice Hockey World Championships. The men's World Championships predates the women's by more than 25 years.

USA Hockey defeated rival Canada 7-1 in the inaugural gold medal game. The tournament featured teams from Norway, Great Britain, Australia, and Team World, with Kelsey DiClaudio earning tournament MVP honors for Team USA.

"This event itself, it felt groundbreaking and hopefully it is groundbreaking," DiClaudio said in August.

The sport needs more fully functioning national teams to qualify for Paralympic inclusion. Team World represented a step forward at Worlds, featuring athletes from nine different countries aiming to help grow the sport in their home nations.

"We're not going to stop until we get to the Paralympics," DiClaudio continued. "My teammates and I, we dream of being Paralympians."

With the 2026 Winter Paralympics decision in the books, the sport remains focused on 2030. The World Championship has also become an annual event, providing regular international competition between Winter Games.

USA head coach Rose Misiewicz acknowledged the work ahead. "To get to the Paralympics would be a dream," she said. "The World Championships were a huge milestone that needed to be accomplished, and we have some more milestones to go."

USA Hockey captain Hilary Knight opened up this week, telling CBS Mornings on Monday that she played with a torn MCL at the 2026 Winter Olympics — and skated through the injury to a gold medal.

"To be able to play through injury was definitely a mental sort of gymnastic challenge for myself — and also physical," said Knight on the morning show. "We've got some amazing support staff that did their best to get me out there and perform at my best, as best as I could."

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Knight's best translates to the USA's best, as the 36-year-old became the all-time top US scorer during last month's Olympics when she slotted in the game-tying goal that sent the team's 2-1 gold medal win over Canada into its decisive overtime.

"I'm not walking around the best," Knight said about her injury. "I'm missing a few games for the Seattle Torrent now." 

Her club team placed the PWHL pioneer on their long-term injured reserve, with Hilary Knight joining her USA teammate and Minnesota Frost captain Kendall Coyne Schofield on the third-year pro league's injured list for the foreseeable future.

The Torrent currently sit last in the 2025/26 PWHL standings, while the two-time reigning champion Frost are currently in third place — just five points below the league-leading Montréal Victoire — with just under two months left in regular-season play.

Acclaimed actor Stanley Tucci hosted the US women's hockey team for lunch in Milan earlier this month, shortly before footage of the men's team eating McDonald's at the White House sparked widespread fan reaction.

USA Hockey posted photos on Instagram showing Tucci dining with the women's Olympic team on February 10th, captioning the image "Lunch with @stanleytucci…an absolute dream for members." The post subsequently earned more than 90,000 likes and 574 comments.

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The 65-year-old actor is known for his roles in The Devil Wears Prada as well as hosting the food series Searching for Italy. He is also an Olympic sports enthusiast, rubbing elbows with gold medal-winning women's hockey stars Hilary Knight and Kendall Coyne Schofield during the Milan lunch.

Meanwhile, a video showing the US men's hockey team eating McDonald's at President Trump's White House recently circulated on Reddit and social media. In the clip, players in navy "USA" shirts sat around a long table stacked with burgers and fries.

Fans were quick to point out the difference between the two victory meals. One user tweeted that the women's lunch was "infinitely cooler than a White House visit," while another fan said they would "give anything to share a meal with stanley tucci."

While both US teams won Olympic gold medals, the conflicting meals have followed the conversation off the ice.

US captain Hilary Knight criticized comments Trump made about the women's hockey team on Wednesday, as the Olympic gold medalist called the President's words a "distasteful joke" during a SportsCenter appearance.

Trump made the comment during a congratulatory call to the men's hockey team, as the players celebrated their Olympic gold medal win. He invited the men's team to the State of the Union address at the White House, then joked he would have to invite the women's hockey team too or face impeachment. Several men's players laughed at Trump's remarks, drawing public criticism after the video went viral.

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Knight later said Trump's comment overshadowed the women's team's Olympic achievements. "I thought it was sort of a distasteful joke and unfortunately that is overshadowing a lot of the success," she told the ESPN broadcast, emphasizing celebrating accomplishments rather than focusing on lapses in support.

Knight led Team USA to its third Olympic gold this year, scoring the tying goal against Canada in the final game's last two minutes. Megan Keller then netted the overtime winner to secure the 2-1 victory — and the Knight's second gold medal.

The 36-year-old also became the most decorated player in US women's hockey history, capping her Olympic career ranked first among US skaters in goals (15) and points (33) over five Winter Games.

With the PWHL and NCAA hockey returning to the ice this week, the women's team opted to decline their White House invitation.

"Due to the timing and previously scheduled academic and professional commitments following the Games, the athletes are unable to participate," the team stated Monday.

Every Wednesday in February, JWS celebrates Black History Month by spotlighting a prominent Black figure in women's sports history.

Lauryn Williams stands out on the Olympic stage, retiring as one of just six athletes in the world — and the first-ever US woman — to medal at both the Summer and the Winter Games.

Born in 1983, the Pennsylvania product started her historic career as a sprinter on the track and field team at the University of Miami, qualifying for her first Olympics within weeks of graduating in 2004 — before going on to take silver in the 100-meter dash in Athens.

After failing to medal at the 2008 Beijing Games, Williams stepped away from competing for a year, returning to the track in 2011 and earning her first Olympic gold medal in 2012 as part of Team USA's 4×100-meter team in London.

The three-time World Champion sprint star then traded one track for another in the fall of 2013, pivoting to bobsledding where her speed took her to the highest echelon of the cold-weather sport.

Less than 18 months after last medaling in the Summer Games, Williams qualified to represent the USA in the two-woman bobsled on the Winter Olympics' stage, traveling to the 2014 Sochi Games where she brought home silver alongside US bobsled icon Elana Meyers Taylor.

Skyrocketing from complete bobsled novice to the Olympic podium in just six months, Williams made history 12 years ago — and to date, the 42-year-old remains the only US woman to eve earn both Summer and Winter Olympic hardware.

"Anytime I step on any track — ice track, regular track, any kind of track — my goal is to win," Williams said after her Sochi victory. "So I'm not surprised at all."