Let's predict the 2028 USA Olympic men's basketball roster: Expect a youth movement

Zach KramFeb 23, 2026, 07:00 AM ETCloseZach Kram is a national NBA writer for ESPN.com, specializing in short- and long-term trends across the league’s analytics landscape. He previously worked at The Ringer covering the NBA and MLB. You can follow Zach on X via @zachkram.Multiple Authors

Ant Edwards explains why he enjoyed the All-Star Game’s competitiveness (0:52)Anthony Edwards tells Malika Andrews why he enjoyed the NBA All-Star Game’s competitiveness this year. (0:52)

The 2026 Winter Olympics have concluded, and the United States, unsurprisingly, did not place atop the medal table. The United States usually excels more at the Summer Olympics; the Americans haven’t won the medal count at a Winter Games since 1932, but they have topped the medal table in seven of the past eight Summer Games. (China was the only exception at the 2008 Beijing Games.)

Team USA has consistently medaled in five-on-five men’s basketball. The Americans have won five gold medals in a row — but they’ve had to work for the past couple, including close calls in the medal rounds against Serbia and France.

As the Olympic focus shifts from Milan to Southern California, it’s time to take stock of who might make the new-look American roster. We started with a long list of more than 80 candidates, based on previous Olympic and FIBA World Cup rosters and player development over the past couple of years. Let’s whittle them down to a projected 12-man Olympic squad.

The 2024 Olympic squad was the oldest in Team USA history, with an average age of 30.1 and seven repeat players. Anthony Edwards (22), Tyrese Haliburton (24) and Jayson Tatum (26) were the only Americans younger than 27.

That’s not a typical distribution. The majority of Team USA representatives since the introduction of NBA players in the 1992 Games have been in their mid-to-late 20s, with only rare exceptions for much younger or older players.

The relative lack of young players is notable when forecasting the 2028 roster. There have been only six 21-and-under Americans since the ’92 Dream Team: Anthony Davis, fresh out of college in 2012; Keldon Johnson, a late addition after Bradley Beal dropped out because of COVID-19 protocols in 2021; and four players (James, Carmelo Anthony, Emeka Okafor and Amare Stoudemire) on the 2004 squad.

This year’s Rookie of the Year favorite Cooper Flagg has a strong chance of becoming the seventh such player; he’ll be 21 in summer 2028. But if Flagg makes the team, then it’s unlikely that any of the top prospects in the ballyhooed 2026 draft class — Darryn Peterson, AJ Dybantsa and Cameron Boozer — will join him. In 2004, the only time that multiple 21-and-under pros appeared on Team USA’s roster, the Americans won bronze.

Meanwhile, only two Americans since 2000 have made their Olympic debut at age 32 or older: Curry, who was 36 in his lone Olympic appearance in 2024, and JaVale McGee, who was a 33-year-old addition to the 2020 roster after Kevin Love pulled out late in the process.

If that holds true, Kawhi Leonard (37), Alex Caruso (34), Josh Hart (33), Bobby Portis (33), Julius Randle (33), Myles Turner (32), Aaron Gordon (32) and Cameron Johnson (32) will not be Olympians in 2028.

Unsurprisingly, given the evolution of the NBA this century, the Americans’ pool of guards is their deepest of any position.

That list starts with Edwards, who will be 26 in 2028 and might be the Americans’ best player at that point. He ranked fourth on the 2024 team in scoring, and he’s as close to a lock as exists for the next Team USA Olympic roster.

Beyond that duo are candidates with scarcely any separation among them. Devin Booker is already a two-time gold medalist, and he could go for a third at 31 years old. Donovan Mitchell and Jalen Brunson will also be 31 in 2028 — potential first-time Olympians after previously playing in the World Cup.

Dropping down a few years in age, Tyrese Maxey and Cade Cunningham should be strong contenders, as they continue to ascend and will be squarely in their primes in 2028. And rookies Kon Knueppel and VJ Edgecombe could vault onto the Olympic roster, given the incredibly impressive starts to their NBA careers; both players will be just shy of their 23rd birthdays during the next Olympics.

If Edwards isn’t the best American player in 2028, then Tatum might be. Tatum is a two-time Olympian, and he said after the 2024 Games that his “tough” and “humbling” experience, in which he fell to the end of Steve Kerr’s bench, won’t affect whether he participates in Los Angeles. If Tatum wants to play now that Erik Spoelstra has taken over for Kerr — and, similar to Haliburton, returns to his previous level by 2028 after his own Achilles tear — he’s an easy choice.

So is Flagg, who impressed the Team USA brass with his performance in scrimmages against the 2024 Olympic roster before playing in college at Duke. Given Flagg’s rapid rise during his rookie season, he’s on a path to become an All-Star and one of the best two-way players in the world by 2028.

Incidentally, the crop of American wings is full of two-way stars. Jaylen Brown and Mikal Bridges would be on the older side for first-time Olympians (both 31 in 2028), but could be worthy candidates; so, too, could the younger Jalen Williams, Jalen Johnson and Scottie Barnes, who will all be in their primes in a couple of years. Brandon Miller is younger than this group but has the potential to raise his game to its level.

Other options offer more specialized skill sets. Trey Murphy III and Michael Porter Jr. would provide size and shooting, which is always a plus on the international stage, while a litany of ace perimeter defenders — Amen Thompson, Tari Eason, Stephon Castle, Jaden McDaniels, Herbert Jones — could serve as energy guys and designated stoppers off the bench.

This positional grouping might feature the most changes between 2024 and 2028. The three big men from Team USA’s roster in Paris will all be in their 30s by 2028 — Bam Adebayo (30), Joel Embiid (34) and Anthony Davis (35) — and small-ball center options Durant and James are even older.

This positional grouping also might be the most crucial to pick correctly, as Team USA’s toughest competition in the tournament should include France, with Victor Wembanyama, and Serbia, with Nikola Jokic. The Americans will need accomplished, mobile centers to keep pace with the best bigs in the world.

If Embiid and Davis want to play, then Team USA might keep their spots reserved. But it’s hard to predict whether either will be healthy next season, let alone 2½ years from now. Two-time gold medalist Adebayo, meanwhile, doesn’t have as high a ceiling as Embiid or Davis, but he has three advantages to return to the roster: He’s younger, less injury-prone and coached by Spoelstra, who has worked with him in Miami for his entire NBA career.

The next set of bigs includes the past two Americans to win Defensive Player of the Year, Evan Mobley and Jaren Jackson Jr., and the player who might join them this season, Chet Holmgren. All three are superb defenders who can space the floor on the other end, though Jackson’s candidacy could be marred by his weak national team performance at the 2023 World Cup.

Other center candidates come with less shooting range but more bulky physicality, including Jalen Duren, Walker Kessler, Jarrett Allen and Donovan Clingan. Zion Williamson and Paolo Banchero are wild cards who balance tremendous potential with major flaws. Williamson’s health and defensive shortcomings mean he’s not a favorite to be an Olympian, while Banchero, who played as a small-ball center at the 2023 World Cup, has slid since then due to his continued inefficiency and poor advanced stats.

As has become the custom for Team USA’s rosters, we’ll bring nine perimeter players and three bigs to Los Angeles.

Haliburton and Edwards grab the two starting backcourt spots as returning members of the 2024 roster. But the third spot goes to a new player: Knueppel. With a 43% 3-point stroke on a high volume of attempts, he’s set to be one of the NBA’s most effective shooters for years to come, and that’s a valuable skill in international play. With decent size and playmaking ability, Knueppel can also contribute in other ways beyond 3-point shooting.

The last guard spot was the hardest decision on the roster, but for now, Cunningham gets the honor ahead of Booker, Mitchell, Brunson and Maxey. The Detroit Pistons’ leader isn’t as efficient at scoring in the NBA as those other options, but that won’t be needed on a loaded Olympic roster, and his size and defensive advantages mean he’s the slight favorite. It’s notable that two of the reserve guard spots in 2024 went to Jrue Holiday and Derrick White rather than score-first stars.

That spot might be earmarked for Booker, who played a strong supporting role on the past two Olympic squads. But his combination of age and slight performance decline — he’s shooting just 32.6% on 3-pointers over the past two seasons — suggests he might not be the best option several years from now, compared with players in their mid-20s.

On the wing, Tatum and Flagg are shoo-ins to start at forward. Williams also gets in, assuming his wrist issues resolve within the next two years and his shooting returns to normal — after shooting 38% on 3s his first three seasons, he’s at only 31% this season. He’s the kind of two-way wing with playoff experience who belongs on an Olympic roster.

Note that if Durant is still engaged and deserving, that last spot will be his instead. He’s already the most decorated Olympian in men’s basketball history, with four gold medals, and his performance in the NBA has scarcely declined. But given his age and injury history, it’s hard to ensure he’ll be one of the Americans’ best options in 2028, so he’s not in the projection for now.

Finally, Adebayo is the lone returning center. He’ll either start or back up Holmgren, who offers the roster’s best combination of rim protection, defensive mobility and 3-point shooting.

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