Mikaela Shiffrin has described her women's slamon win as 'crazy'

 Mikaela Shiffrin has described her women's slamon win as 'crazy' US teenage sensation Mikaela Shiffrin was crowned women's slalom world champion here on Saturday, confirming her nickname as slalom princess. The 17-year-old clocked an aggregate time over both runs of 1min 39.85 to finish first in a nail-biting last women's race of these championships.
Austria's Michaela Kirchgasser shocked the home crowd by topping her much-favoured compatriots for second place at 0.22sec, while Sweden's Frida Hansdotter was third at 0.26sec.
Shiffrin's win consolidated the US team's dominant run at these championships, after Ted Ligety's three gold medals and Julia Mancuso's super-G bronze.
Despite a couple of small mistakes, the teenager demonstrated again her incredible form which has seen her take three slalom wins this winter, her second season, to top the World Cup rankings in that discipline.
Third after the first run, she put in a blazing second run to take the win.
But she had yet to realise her achievement, she said after her victory.
"I don't know if I ever will. It was crazy, there are so many emotions today."
"I thought I skied solid but probably not to be my potential, my legs were tired.
"Then two minutes before the start of the second run, I felt it and I knew."
Among the Austrians, defending champion Marlies Schild and 2011 silver medallist Kathrin Zettel had been the favourites to take a medal but Kirchgasser outshone them and screamed with joy when she found out she had won her first championship medal.
"I'm so happy. It's so great. I was standing there thinking I'd be fourth. I didn't even realise I was second. I'm not quite realising yet," she said.
Hansdotter, who was fastest after the first run, was happy with her bronze.
"I did two good runs and I have a medal so I'm satisfied."
The women's slalom was set up as a duel between Shiffrin and returning slalom queen Schild.
The four-time slalom World Cup winner and Olympic silver medallist finished ninth at 1.58sec but showed she was back on the scene with a combative run in her first competitive race since a knee injury in late December.
The 31-year-old was then feared out for the season but made a surprise comeback for the world championships.
Olympic champion Maria Hoefl-Riesch missed out on a fourth medal at these championships - after super-combined gold and bronze in the downhill and team event - going out near the bottom of the course even as she had the fastest split times.
The closing race of the two-week event will be the men's slalom on Sunday.
Source: AFP