While competitive surfing tends to draw more attention during Summer Olympics years, it's not a once-every-four-years sport. There are many competitive surfing events year-round, including nine competitions for the Championship Tour (CT), finishing up with the Lexus World Surf League Finals . But one question that may come to your mind when you hear about competitive surfing is: how do surfers train for their competitions? The obvious answer is by surfing, of course.

But when a surfer is traveling to a location with notoriously difficult and dangerous waves — like Teahupo'o in Tahiti, where the Paris 2024 Olympic surfing events were held — how can a surfer who lives in a place with less-intense swells prepare? And what other workouts do they do to complement their practice time? "This sport becomes so challenging because there's no on-off, realistically. The sport is based on Mother Nature," " says Tracy Axel, a lifelong surfer, and the team manager for Team USA's Olympic Surf Team. Case in point: the surfing events at the 2024 Olympics were postponed several times due to weather.

Of course, athletes are unique, and therefore the way they train has to be individual. But one thing's for sure: the sport is no joke. One thing Axel was particularly excited about during the 2024 Games was the fact that women had the ability to surf the intense waves of Teahupo'o — an opportunity they hadn't been given for the better part of a decade .

"I believe that the Olympic stage is ano.