USA Basketball confirms Olympic roster, which includes Jerami Grant, Draymond Green

By Tim Reynolds
Associated Press

As expected, USA Basketball will have a Michigan flavor for the Tokyo Olympics.

Detroit Pistons forward Jerami Grant and former Michigan State star and Saginaw native Draymond Green will represent the country, with the Americans formally revealing their roster Monday. Grant and Green's inclusion were reported last week.

Pistons forward Jerami Grant will play for USA Basketball in the Tokyo Olympics.

The roster will be third-oldest U.S. men’s team in Olympic history for the Tokyo Games. The 12-man list includes five players — Green, Kevin Love, Kevin Durant, Jrue Holiday, and Damian Lillard — already in their 30s.

In addition to those five players and Grant, the U.S. also has gotten commitments from Bam Adebayo, Bradley Beal, Devin Booker, Zach LaVine, former Piston Khris Middleton and Jayson Tatum to play on the team. All those commitments became known in recent weeks; USA Basketball, which is seeking a fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal, merely made it official Monday with the announcement.

“USA Basketball selects players to represent our country in international competition with the skills, character, experience, and desire to win,” said retired Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of USA Basketball’s Board of Directors. “We build teams that are versatile and resilient in the short, intense competitions we face. We’re fortunate that this group of elite athletes has volunteered to represent us in Tokyo this summer.”

Love is the oldest, at 32. Tatum, at 22, is the youngest. The average age — calculated by USA Basketball to be 28.2 at the end of the Tokyo Games if this roster doesn’t change — ranks behind only the 1996 team (29.4) and the original Dream Team in 1992 (29.0) as the oldest groups that the U.S. has sent to an Olympics.

Grant, 27, enjoyed a breakout in his first season with the Pistons, averaging a career-best 22.3 points per game. Green finished his ninth season with the Golden State Warriors, with whom he's a three-time All-Star following an All-American career at Michigan State.

“USA Basketball is as strong as it’s ever been and I’m very happy with that,” USA Basketball senior men’s national team managing director Jerry Colangelo said. “Having said that, there’s work to be done, and that is one more go — the Olympic efforts in Tokyo.”

Putting together a roster was challenging for many reasons, Colangelo said. Among them: a compacted NBA season running later into the summer than is ordinarily the case, several potential Olympians dealing with injuries, and of course, the ongoing effects of the coronavirus pandemic.

“To be selected to the United States Olympic team is an honor and a blessing,” said Beal, who celebrated his 28th birthday on Monday. “Representing my country on the world’s biggest stage alongside so many of the league’s best players is a privilege that both humbles and inspires me.”

Durant is on the Olympic team for the third time, making him the fourth U.S. player to have at least that many selections; Carmelo Anthony was on each of the last four teams, while LeBron James and David Robinson are the other three-time selections.

Durant was part of the gold-medal-winning squads in 2012 and 2016. Love was also on the 2012 team, Green was on the 2016 team. The other nine players on the U.S. roster will be appearing in the Olympics for the first time.

“I’m happy for the selected players and looking forward to having the opportunity to work with this wonderful group when practice gets underway on July 6 in Las Vegas,” U.S. coach Gregg Popovich said. “I’m excited to represent the United States in our quest to earn a gold medal in Tokyo.”

Popovich will be assisted by Steve Kerr, Lloyd Pierce and Jay Wright. Jerry Colangelo is again the team’s managing director, serving in that role for the final time before Grant Hill assumes the job when these Olympics are complete.

“Our roster features players who are experienced in the international game, and this team has outstanding athleticism, versatility and balance,” Colangelo said. “We also believe we have excellent leadership which is a necessity in order to develop the needed chemistry. We still have a lot of challenges in front of us, but I believe these players will become a team that all Americans will be proud of.”

The team will be formally nominated to the Tokyo Games by the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee next month.

Detroit News staff contributed.