NBA superstars LeBron James and Stephen Curry are among several top players interested in competing for the United States at next year's Paris Olympics, according to multiple reports Monday.
Two-time Olympic champion and four-time NBA champion James has been recruiting fellow NBA stars for a U.S. squad that seeks a fifth gold medal in a row next year in France, according to The Athletic.
Curry, a four-time NBA champion guard with the Golden State Warriors, has expressed a desire to play on the Olympic squad guided by Warriors coach Steve Kerr, ESPN reported.
The news comes a day after a U.S. team of 20-something NBA stars left the Basketball World Cup empty-handed following losses to Canada in the bronze-medal game and to eventual champion Germany in a semifinal.
James, a 38-year-old forward, led the USA to Olympic gold in 2008 in Beijing and 2012 in London but has not played since.
He knows the sting of defeat on the global stage, however, having been a reserve on the 2004 U.S. squad that settled for bronze at the Athens Olympics and a 2006 team that took bronze at the Basketball World Cup.
James is not only interested in playing for Paris Olympic gold but has called fellow former NBA Most Valuable Players Curry and Kevin Durant hoping to entice them to play in 2024.
Two-time NBA champion Durant, a Phoenix Suns forward who turns 35 later this month, helped U.S. Olympic gold-medal efforts in London as well as 2016 in Rio and in 2021 at Tokyo.
Curry has never played for the U.S. Olympic squad but helped American clubs win the 2010 and 2014 World Cup crowns – their only such titles since 1994.
Others James has recruited for the 2024 U.S. Olympic team, according to The Athletic, include his Los Angeles Lakers teammate Anthony Davis, Golden State's Draymond Green and Boston's Jayson Tatum.
Phoenix's Devin Booker, a three-time NBA All-Star, and 38-year-old Chris Paul of Golden State, a 2008 and 2012 gold medalist, are also among those ESPN said are interested in the Paris Olympics.