A sizeable Paris crowd produced plenty of noise on Thursday for the women's fencing ranking round of the modern pentathlon.
French medal contender Elodie Clouvel had them stomping and cheering as she led the women's competition at the North Paris Arena, a cavernous exhibition center out on the fringes near Charles de Gaulle airport.
She registered 27 wins and eight defeats from her one-to-one bouts to end up with 260 points. Hungarian Michelle Gulyas was second with 245, with Britain's defending champion Kate French third with 240.
"It's magical. I took everything I could, I enjoyed it," said Clouvel.
The support surprised rivals more used to a quieter preliminary. The last Games in Tokyo three years ago took place without spectators due to COVID but it was also novel for those used to more recent World Cup events.
"I think we are used to just having our coaches screaming at us and our teammates and not really having a crowd," said American Jess Savner.
"It makes all the difference. You want to make the people watching you proud and you want to put a bit more oomph into it. It was really special."
Britain's Kerenza Bryson, who ranked fifth, said it had been a very different experience.
"It was definitely a completely different atmosphere, really noisy, the whole preparation getting into the stadium. It was crazy. I struggled with that a little bit at the start, it was just very nerve-racking," she said.
The event moves on Friday to the other end of the spectrum — the gardens of the opulent Palace of Versailles for the equestrian, swimming, laser pistol shooting and running components.