Skip to content
NOWCAST WDSU News at 10pm
Watch on Demand
Advertisement

Caroline Marks of U.S. wins gold at Paris Olympics surfing in Tahiti

Caroline Marks of U.S. wins gold at Paris Olympics surfing in Tahiti
This wave is so special. You know, we have to share it. We are happy to receive those people over here. We are very happy because we have to share this wave but be careful of not doing bad thing on the Alvian every day since almost one year now, they are digging, digging, digging in the river. You know, I don't know why. And we have dirty water, we cannot go fishing anymore because you can't see anything. It's very dirty, very dark. Um So an is when we saw that we had some impact on the reef uh during the barges test, we were, it was awful for us also because *** lot of people who are working for Paris 2024 in Haiti are local. So they have this special relationship with nature, with their lands and it was like *** bomb for us. Be the other one is uh it's so fragile. So we have to protect it. If not, if not, we, we lose everything, everything.
Advertisement
Caroline Marks of U.S. wins gold at Paris Olympics surfing in Tahiti
French Polynesian Kauli Vaast won the gold medal in men's surfing while Caroline Marks from the United States won the women's surfing gold medal on Monday at the Paris Olympics in Tahiti.Cheers and tears erupted from boats floating near the wave and crowds of spectators along the shore as the men's final match ended in the afternoon as Vaast pumped his arms into the air in victory after beating Jack Robinson from Australia, who received the silver medal.The women's gold medal match ended about thirty minutes later, with Marks beating Tatiana Weston-Webb from Brazil, who was awarded the silver medal.For the bronze medals, Gabriel Medina from Brazil and Johanne Defay from France won after beating Alonso Correa from Peru and Brisa Hennessy from Costa Rica, respectively.All winners of the Paris Olympics surfing competition are first-time Olympic medalists, after defending Olympic women's champion Carissa Moore of the United States — who won at the Tokyo Games, where Olympic surfing debuted — was beaten in the quarterfinals on Thursday."Obviously I'm really sad to not be a part of finals day, to get to represent my home and my family one more time, but I'm really grateful," Moore said after her loss. "I just hope that at the end of the day I can encourage whoever is watching, win or lose, don't be afraid to go into it fearlessly and don't be afraid to fail."The final day of the Paris Olympics surfing competition began Monday morning after two days of delays due to unfavorable conditions. In the morning, conditions were smaller than the heavy, barrel-shaped waves Teahupo'o is famed for and that were seen during part of the men's competition the week before.But by the afternoon waves grew larger and more frequent, giving athletes a chance to impress judges with the time they spent inside the barrels. At one point during the competition a whale jumped out of the water while surfers were in the water.Six of the eight surfer who made it to the semifinals represented different nations. French Polynesian, Peruvian, Australian and other national flags flew from boats near the waves. While not every surfer who competed was able to bring home a medal, many agreed that the second-ever Olympics surfing competition — filled with viral photographs, record-breaking scores and hours of stunning video footage broadcast to viewers around the world — helped promote the sport. "Everyone's watching and paying attention," said Medina, who said he gained millions of social media followers after a photo of him floating in the sky next to his surfboard while bailing out of a wave went viral during the competition. "I think surfing wins"

French Polynesian Kauli Vaast won the gold medal in men's surfing while Caroline Marks from the United States won the women's surfing gold medal on Monday at the Paris Olympics in Tahiti.

Advertisement

Cheers and tears erupted from boats floating near the wave and crowds of spectators along the shore as the men's final match ended in the afternoon as Vaast pumped his arms into the air in victory after beating Jack Robinson from Australia, who received the silver medal.

The women's gold medal match ended about thirty minutes later, with Marks beating Tatiana Weston-Webb from Brazil, who was awarded the silver medal.

For the bronze medals, Gabriel Medina from Brazil and Johanne Defay from France won after beating Alonso Correa from Peru and Brisa Hennessy from Costa Rica, respectively.

All winners of the Paris Olympics surfing competition are first-time Olympic medalists, after defending Olympic women's champion Carissa Moore of the United States — who won at the Tokyo Games, where Olympic surfing debuted — was beaten in the quarterfinals on Thursday.

Caroline Marks of Team United States celebrates after winning the women&apos&#x3B;s Gold Medal of surfing on day nine of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 on August 05, 2024 in Teahupo&apos&#x3B;o, French Polynesia (Photo by Ed Sloane / POOL / AFP) (Photo by ED SLOANE/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
ED SLOANE
Caroline Marks of Team United States celebrates after winning the women’s Gold Medal of surfing

"Obviously I'm really sad to not be a part of finals day, to get to represent my home and my family one more time, but I'm really grateful," Moore said after her loss. "I just hope that at the end of the day I can encourage whoever is watching, win or lose, don't be afraid to go into it fearlessly and don't be afraid to fail."

The final day of the Paris Olympics surfing competition began Monday morning after two days of delays due to unfavorable conditions. In the morning, conditions were smaller than the heavy, barrel-shaped waves Teahupo'o is famed for and that were seen during part of the men's competition the week before.

But by the afternoon waves grew larger and more frequent, giving athletes a chance to impress judges with the time they spent inside the barrels. At one point during the competition a whale jumped out of the water while surfers were in the water.

Six of the eight surfer who made it to the semifinals represented different nations. French Polynesian, Peruvian, Australian and other national flags flew from boats near the waves.

While not every surfer who competed was able to bring home a medal, many agreed that the second-ever Olympics surfing competition — filled with viral photographs, record-breaking scores and hours of stunning video footage broadcast to viewers around the world — helped promote the sport.

"Everyone's watching and paying attention," said Medina, who said he gained millions of social media followers after a photo of him floating in the sky next to his surfboard while bailing out of a wave went viral during the competition. "I think surfing wins"