Olympian Tara Davis-Woodhall on Her First Clinique Campaign

Olympian Tara Davis-Woodhall on Her First Clinique Campaign


In the modern world, sports aren’t just about what happens on the court, field, or track. Much of the buzz around athletes actually takes place before their events—that is when they arrive at their respective venues and showcase their latest fashion creations. In basketball, that’s referred to as a tunnel ‘fit; in Formula One, a paddock ‘fit; and so on. What athletes wear when they’re not in uniform matters, especially to fans who might never get to speak to their heroes. Clothes are the perfect form of communication—a window into who your favorite athlete is and what they stand for. That’s what Go Sports is all about. Yes, we care about box scores, the results of Free Practice 1 (even if it is at 3:00 a.m.), and RHOBH-level rivalries, but today, sports fashion matters too. We’re not ashamed to say so.

If you’ve ever wondered what success looks like, we’d point you to Tara Davis-Woodhall. The room seems to lean in when she enters, her head high and shoulders back—the weight of an Olympic gold medal having adorned it just two summers ago. Her eyes sparkle as she talks about the sport she loves, her cheeks flush as she falls into conversation about her doting husband (and fellow athlete, Paralympian gold medalist Hunter Woodhall), and her skin glows as if made of moondust—glistening whether freshly finished with her regimented skincare routine or slick with sweat after a two-hour training session.

An image of Tara Davis-Woodhall and Hunter Woodhall in a 2026 Clinique campaign.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Clinique)

Davis-Woodhall takes her seat in a sun-soaked New York City penthouse to chat with Who What Wear about the newest notch in her decorated belt of life, marriage, and Olympic training—the “Unstoppable Together” skincare campaign with Clinique, in which she stars alongside her high school sweetheart-turned-husband. The Olympic gold-winning pair met at a high school track-and-field meet in Idaho, where Davis-Woodhall made the first move. “I stepped onto the track and said, ‘I don’t know why I have to do this, but I have to give you a hug,'” she reminisced in a 2024 interview with Town & Country. According to Woodhall, the sparks flew from before that interaction at all—having stated in a 2019 YouTube video that he thought to himself, “I’m going to marry that girl” after watching her compete earlier that day.

Article continues below