There were less than 10 minutes left in the semifinal round of the women's Olympic surfing event in August 2024, and US surfer Caroline Marks was two points behind French athlete Johanne Defay when she saw the good wave coming and took it. Marks got barreled in the Teahupoʻo tube, then switched to turns, earning a 7.00 — the exact score she needed to advance.

She matched Defay's 12.17 points and won with the heat's highest-scoring wave. Marks had scored higher with other waves that week, like her first-round ride with a late start, which had her air dropping, extending, and compressing as she landed, earning her a 9.

43. Though earlier rides had delivered shots of competitive momentum, the semifinal win felt big: it took her somewhere she had never been. Marks's first Olympic run at Tsurigasaki Beach in 2021 ended with a fourth-place finish during the bronze medal match.

After defeating Defay, she knew she'd be going home with at least a silver medal. "In Tokyo, I came up one short, so that felt so good," Marks tells PS. "I actually got really emotional when I won.

It was a really close heat." Later that day, Marks came out of the finals against Brazil's Tatiana Weston-Webb with Olympic gold. A week out, it's still sinking in.

"There's been a lot of emotion," Marks says. "A lot of good emotion, a lot of happy tears , a lot of adrenaline. A very proud feeling, a very surreal feeling.

" For Marks, that pride swells when she remembers where she won, as well: She took gold at Te.