Olympic signoff: USA selfies, Saville's pin haul and Swiatek's reflections

The Paris Olympics saw their fair share of thrilling tennis, gripping drama and clutch performances over nine days of competition at Roland Garros last week.
But the story didn't end when the last ball was struck. As the stars of the Hologic WTA Tour say au revoir to Paris, check out some of the post-tournament highlights from their social media accounts.
Team USA's star-studded selfie collection
In a surprising turn of events, American women were shut out of the podium -- but if their post-Paris social media posts were anything to go by, they didn't leave Paris empty-handed.
World No.2 Coco Gauff
Gauff's doubles partner Jessica Pegula
The pair, plus Desirae Krawczyk and Emma Navarro
Now, they can say that they knew her when.
Daria Saville
Pin trading is a sport all its own at the Olympics, as athletes, staff, media and fans hunt every four years for the special, commemorative enamel pins distributed by National Olympic Committees, sponsors, media and other famous folks.
Four-time Olympian Serena Williams -- a star in the Games' opening ceremony -- might describe herself as a "first-class pin collector," but by the time the tennis event in Paris ended, Daria Saville
The Aussie, competing in her second Olympics, showed off the more than four dozen pins that she collected in a social media video posted Monday -- an impressive collection that included many pieces from far-flung countries that the globe-trotting tennis player hasn't yet visited.
Some of the highlights included a steaming coffee cup from Colombia; a cartoonish zebra from Botswana; and bubble tea from Chinese Taipei -- and a giant gold turtle from the Seychelles, which entered just three athletes into the Paris Games.
Which was was your favorite?
Iga Swiatek
At the start of the Olympics, World No.1 Iga Swiatek
"After a couple of days I feel ready to sum up this chapter. Joy, happiness, sadness, disappointment, satisfaction, hunger for more, pride and so many other emotions, thoughts ... I'm still figuring it out and I feel how valuable this experience was to me," Swiatek wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter, on Tuesday.
"Maybe in the future I will assess these two weeks with a bigger picture and a better perspective, but I already see a lot."
🥉🇵🇱 After a couple of days I feel ready to sum up this chapter… pic.twitter.com/8PfRVQkKyF
— Iga Świątek (@iga_swiatek) August 6, 2024
While personal growth -- "how much I can do, how many opportunities I have to become a better player and human" -- since her Olympic debut three years ago in Tokyo was a highlight of Swiatek's prose, she also displayed acute awareness of the bigger picture.
"When I'm thinking about the Olympics and tennis, I'm so proud, how our sport was pictured in Paris," Swiatek added, saying she was "grateful" to share the podium with gold medalist Zheng Qinwen and silver medalist Donna Vekic
"We should appreciate that tennis plays such an important role in the world of sports. I'm happy that my story is a part of it,"