Who's competing for Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics? From cycling to gymnastics, swimming to archery, here are 40 athletes to watch this year as they strive for world records and represent the United States.Video above: Team USA athletes of all agesCasey Kaufhold: ArcheryCasey Kaufhold is the world's No. 1-ranked women's recurve archer. She’s trying to become the first American to win Olympic gold in archery since 1996. Last year, the native of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, won the Olympic test event in Paris, which led to her No. 1 ranking. It was among three straight top-four finishes for her in World Cup events. She won gold in the mixed team and team events and bronze in the individual event at the Pan-Am Games later that year in Santiago, Chile. This year, the 20-year-old won gold in the individual and team events at the Pan-American Championships in Medellin, Colombia. This will be her second trip to the Olympics. In Tokyo, she placed 17th in the ranking round in the women’s individual event. Stephen Curry: BasketballGolden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry is one of several NBA superstars on the U.S. men's basketball team. The 36-year-old from Charlotte, North Carolina, is a four-time NBA champion, two-time NBA MBP and the NBA's three-point leader, but has never played in the Olympics. His head coach, Steve Kerr, will lead the men's team in Paris. Lebron James: BasketballParis will be the first time Lebron James plays in the Olympics since 2012. James, 39, of Akron, Ohio, has two gold medals and a bronze medal to add to his four NBA titles and four NBA MVP honors. Breanna Stewart: Women's basketballBreanna Stewart will play in her third Olympic Games coming off of her MVP honor in Tokyo. The 29-year-old from North Syracuse, New York, plays for the WNBA's New York Liberty and, in 2023, set the league's single-season scoring record, earning her a second WNBA MVP honor. Diana Taurasi: Women's basketballDiana Taurasi, guard for the Phoenix Mercury, has been to five Olympics and won gold every time. The 42-year-old of Chino, California, could bring home a sixth gold medal from Paris, which would break a tie with Sue Bird for the most Olympic basketball golds ever. A sixth medal would also make Taurasi the most decorated team sport athlete in Olympic history. Hannah Roberts, BMX freestyleRoberts has five world titles under her belt, but she's chasing her first Olympic gold medal. She's the favorite in the women's BMX freestyle after finishing second in Tokyo and, in 2019, Roberts became the first woman to land a 360 tailwhip in competition.Roberts, 22, is from Buchanan, Michigan.Jahmal Harvey: Boxing This will be Jahmal Harvey's first appearance at the Olympics, although he won a world title in 2021 and a Pan American Games gold medal in 2023. After the U.S. men brought home three boxing silver medals in Tokyo, the expectation is for Team USA to continue its success in the ring in Paris.Harvey, 21, is from Oxon Hill, Maryland.Victor Montalvo: Breaking Victor Montalvo is the top American in the Olympics' newest sport. And while break dancing has been his passion since he was 10, the Olympics were never on his radar. When the International Olympic Committee announced the sport would make its debut in Paris in 2024, that all changed and made him determined to qualify for Team USA. Montalvo, 30, is from Kissimmee, Florida.Nevin Harrison: CanoeingNevin Harrison was the first U.S. woman to win an Olympic canoeing gold in Tokyo and will defend the title in Paris. The 22-year-old from Seattle has also picked up two world titles. Lee Kiefer: FencingIn Tokyo, Kiefer won the third gold medal for Team USA and the third fencing gold medal in the country's history.Kiefer, a four-time NCAA champion at Notre Dame, placed fifth in London in 2012 and was 10th at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016. Her husband, Gerek Meinhardt, won bronze with the U.S. team in foil at the 2016 Olympics.Kiefer, 30, is from Lexington, Kentucky.Nick Itkin: FencingNick Itkin is a fellow Notre Dame grad and was the youngest American fencer in Tokyo when the men's foil team won bronze. Now, at 24, he's the favorite to win individual foil gold in Paris and could be a key player in Team USA's mission to win the foil team gold medal. Itkin, 30, is from Los Angeles.Xander Schauffele: Golf Xander Schauffele will also look to defend his gold medal from Tokyo, following his top-10 finish in this year's Masters Tournaments.Schauffele, 30, of San Diego, California, is ranked No. 3 in the Official World Golf Ranking. Simone Biles: GymnasticsAll eyes will be on Simone Biles in Paris, where she could become the most decorated American gymnast in Olympic history with one more medal.Biles, 27, of Spring, Texas, has the potential to bring her Olympic medal count to 12 at this year's event.Fred Richard: GymnasticsFred Richard posted the highest score at the 2023 World Gymnastics Championships, helping the team earn bronze, the team's first in nine years. Richard, 20, of Stoughton, Massachusetts, also earned a bronze medal in the all-around, which made him the fourth all-around medalist in history for the American men's gymnastics team.Kara Kohler: RowingKohler is an Olympic veteran, winning bronze at the London Olympics in the quadruple sculls before shifting to single sculls. She won third place at World Cup II and fourth at 2023 Worlds. Kohler, 33, is from Clayton, California.Ilona Maher: RugbyTeam center Ilona Maher, the breakout social media star on TikTok at the Tokyo Olympics, will return to the Team USA rugby team at the 2024 Paris Olympics.Maher, 27, of Burlington, Vermont, is a member of a 12-person team, which is led by co-captains Lauren Doyle and Naya Tapper, and includes Olympians Alev Kelter Lauren Doyle, Kayla Canett, Kristi Kirshe, Ariana Ramsey, and Naya Tapper.The team will look to win the USA Women's Rugby Sevens' first Olympic medal ever, 100 years after the USA won the last Olympic gold in rugby. Vincent Hancock: ShootingThe most decorated Olympic skeet shooter of all time, Hancock has three gold medals in an event no one else has won more than once. Hancock, who aims to retire at the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028, already trains a new generation of U.S. shooters at his complex near Fort Worth, Texas.Hancock could make Olympic history for the U.S. in Paris, where he could become one of six American shooters with at least four gold medals in the sport.Hancock, 35, is from Eatonton, Georgia. Gavin Bottger: SkateboardingGavin Bottger is a 17-year-old rising star in men's park who recently won the Dew Tour and won several X Games medals. He's from Vista, California.Jagger Eaton: SkateboardingJagger Eaton, 23, earned a bronze medal in men's street in Tokyo — and that was with a broken ankle. He's recently won X Games and world titles in men's park and is ranked second in the world rankings, behind Bottger.He's from Mesa, Arizona.Nyjah Huston: SkateboardingAfter a seventh-place finish in Tokyo and tearing his ACL while filming a video in 2022, Nyjah Huston is returning to the Olympics as a favorite for gold in men's street. Huston, 29, is from Davis, California.Trinity Rodman: Women's soccerTrinity Rodman was one of the three forwards who played with Alex Morgan and Sophia Smith in the 2023 Women's World Cup. Although the daughter of NBA Hall of Famer Dennis Rodman has only been on the national team for two years, she could make an impact with goals and assists as a winger. Rodman, 21, is from Newport Beach, California.Sam Watson: Sport climbingSam Watson broke the speed climbing world record twice at a World Cup event in April, making him a gold medal contender in Paris. The 18-year-old hails from Southlake, Texas. Natalia Grossman: Sport climbingNatalia Grossman is the 2021 world champion in bouldering and won gold in a combined event of bouldering and lead climbing at last year's Pan American Games. Grossman, 23, is from Santa Cruz, California.Jack Alexy: SwimmingJack Alexy made a name for himself as a top male sprint swimmer at the 2023 World Swimming Championships, where he earned silver medals in the 50m and 100m freestyle events and earned three medals on U.S. relay teams. Alexy, 21, is from Morristown, New Jersey. Caeleb Dressel: Swimming At the U.S. Olympic trials, Caeleb Dressel earned two individual races at the Paris Olympics — the 50m freestyle and 100m butterfly.Dressel, who took home five gold medals from Tokyo, finished third in the 100 freestyle, relegating him to the relay for that distance. In the aftermath of his Tokyo success, Dressel stunningly walked away from swimming during the 2022 world championships. He later revealed what a toll the sport had taken on him, saying he needed an extended break to rediscover his passion at the pool. Dressel, 27, is from Orange Park, Florida.Katie Ledecky: SwimmingAt the U.S. Olympic trials, Katie Ledecky won all four of her freestyle events, ranging from 200 to 1,500 meters, and she'll again be the face of the American team as she competes in her fourth Olympics.Ledecky, who is just the ninth U.S. swimmer to qualify at least four times for the sport's grandest stage, won't swim the 200, an event that produced only a fifth-place finish in Tokyo. She'll need to improve on her times in the 400 to have a shot at gold in that star-studded event.But she remains the favorite in the 800 — an event where she'll be going for a four-peat — and the 1,500.The 27-year-old Ledecky, who's from Bethesda, Maryland, already has six individual gold medals — more than any female swimmer in Olympic history — and an overall haul of 10 medals that includes seven golds. Video below: Why do they do it? Here's the athletes' motivationKate Douglass: SwimmingKate Douglass is regarded as one of the world's most versatile swimmers.The 22-year-old from Pelham, New York, has claimed spots in three individual races in Paris: the 200m breaststroke, 100m freestyle and 200m individual medley. She'll also be a key performer on the relays.She has all the makings of being the breakout American star in Paris, leading the charge to take down the powerhouse Australian women's team. Regan Smith: SwimmingRegan Smith is a former world record holder in the 100m and 200m backstroke and is a gold medal favorite for the 200m butterfly.Smith, 22, of Lakeville, Minnesota, made her Olympic debut in Tokyo, bringing home three medals. She'll aim to net her first gold medal from Paris.Carissa Moore: SurfingCarissa Moore is the reigning Olympic gold medalist and five-time world champion for the 2024 Olympic surfing event, which will take place in Tahiti. The 31-year-old from Honolulu plans to step away from competition after this year's Olympics.CJ Nickolas: TaekwondoCJ Nickolas earned silver at last year's World Championships and a gold medal at the 2023 Pan American Games, making him a rising star and medal contender in Paris. The 22-year-old is from Brentwood, California. Coco Gauff: TennisCoco Gauff was supposed to play in 2020, but had to withdraw after testing positive for COVID-19. Since then, she earned runner-up at the 2022 French Open in singles and doubles and won her first Grand Slam trophy at the U.S. Open in 2023. The 20-year-old is from Delray Beach, Florida.Ryan Crouser: Track and fieldIn Paris, Ryan Crouser will attempt to become the first three-time Olympic champion in shot put history. Crouser, 31, of Boring, Oregon, won gold in Rio and Tokyo and has won three world titles.Noah Lyles: Track and fieldThe hopes are high for Noah Lyles to be a big winner for Team USA in Paris. He became the first man since Usain Bolt to win gold in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay at the 2023 World Athletics Championships.Lyles, 26, of Alexandria, Virginia, won bronze in Tokyo in the 200m. Anna Hall: Track and fieldAlthough Anna Hall doesn't have Olympic experience, she's on a mission for the heptathlon in Paris and could be the third American woman to medal in the event.After crashing out in hurdles at the U.S. trials, she missed out on the Tokyo Games. But since then, she's earned two world medals. Hall, 23, is from Highlands Ranch, Colorado.Sha’Carri Richardson: Track and fieldSha'Carri Richardson will head to Paris in hopes of redeeming what she could have accomplished in Tokyo. A positive marijuana test cost her the chance to compete in the last Olympics and since then, she's won the 100m gold medal at the 2023 World Track and Field Championships and led the U.S. women to gold in the 4x100m relay. If her success continues in 2024, Richardson, 24, of Dallas, could become the first American woman to win a gold medal in the women's 100m since the 1996 games in Athens. Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone: Track and field During U.S. Olympic trials, 24-year-old Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone lowered the world record for the 400-meter hurdles course for the fifth time and broke her last record by .03 seconds.The latest record doesn’t so much reset the storyline for the Olympics — McLaughlin-Levrone would’ve been the big-time favorite either way — as it forces track to once again rethink what’s possible.McLaughlin-Levrone's performance at the U.S. Olympic trials was only her fourth 400 hurdles race of the season, as she geared back up from a year of running sprints. She also has the best time in the world this year (48.75) in the regular 400, which does nothing to diminish the U.S. team's already strong chances of winning the 4x400 relay at the end of the Olympic track meet.McLaughlin-Levrone is from Dunellen, New Jersey. Jordan Larson: VolleyballJordan Larson, outside hitter and captain of the U.S. women's national team, will hope to bring home a second gold medal from Paris. Larson, 37, of Hooper, Nebraska, is a three-time Olympian. She was part of the team that brought home bronze in 2012, a silver in 2016 and a gold medal from Tokyo.Ashleigh Johnson: Water poloAshleigh Johnson has already won two Olympic gold medals as the goalkeeper of the U.S. team, along with four world titles. She'll aim to bring home a third gold medal from Paris.Johnson, 29, is from Miami, Florida.Aaron Brooks: WrestlingAt the U.S. Olympic trials, Aaron Brooks upset reigning world and Olympic champion David Taylor to secure his spot on the roster for his first Olympic games.Brooks just won his fourth consecutive NCAA title at Penn State University and won a U23 world title last year. Brooks, 24, is from Hagerstown, Maryland. Amit Elor: WrestlingAmit Elor could become the next American woman to earn a gold medal in wrestling, following in the footsteps of Helen Maroulis in 2016 and Tamyra Mensah-Stock in 2020.Elor, 20, of Walnut Creek, California, has won back-to-back world titles at 72kg. Since that isn't an Olympic weight class, she'll compete at 68kg in Paris.
Who's competing for Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics?
From cycling to gymnastics, swimming to archery, here are 40 athletes to watch this year as they strive for world records and represent the United States.
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Video above: Team USA athletes of all ages
Casey Kaufhold: Archery
Casey Kaufhold is the world's No. 1-ranked women's recurve archer. She’s trying to become the first American to win Olympic gold in archery since 1996.
Last year, the native of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, won the Olympic test event in Paris, which led to her No. 1 ranking. It was among three straight top-four finishes for her in World Cup events. She won gold in the mixed team and team events and bronze in the individual event at the Pan-Am Games later that year in Santiago, Chile. This year, the 20-year-old won gold in the individual and team events at the Pan-American Championships in Medellin, Colombia.
This will be her second trip to the Olympics. In Tokyo, she placed 17th in the ranking round in the women’s individual event.
Mike Coppola
Casey Kaufhold
Stephen Curry: Basketball
Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry is one of several NBA superstars on the U.S. men's basketball team. The 36-year-old from Charlotte, North Carolina, is a four-time NBA champion, two-time NBA MBP and the NBA's three-point leader, but has never played in the Olympics. His head coach, Steve Kerr, will lead the men's team in Paris.
MediaNews Group/East Bay Times via Getty Images
Golden State Warriors’ Stephen Curry #30 weaves his way though the Sacramento Kings defense at the Golden One Center in Sacramento, Calif., on Tuesday, April 16, 2023.
Paris will be the first time Lebron James plays in the Olympics since 2012. James, 39, of Akron, Ohio, has two gold medals and a bronze medal to add to his four NBA titles and four NBA MVP honors.
Steve Christo - Corbis
LeBron James during the men’s basketball final between USA and Spain during the London 2012 Olympic games.
Breanna Stewart: Women's basketball
Breanna Stewart will play in her third Olympic Games coming off of her MVP honor in Tokyo. The 29-year-old from North Syracuse, New York, plays for the WNBA's New York Liberty and, in 2023, set the league's single-season scoring record, earning her a second WNBA MVP honor.
Mike Coppola
Breanna Stewart poses for a portrait during the 2024 Team USA Media Summit at Marriott Marquis Hotel on April 17, 2024.
Diana Taurasi, guard for the Phoenix Mercury, has been to five Olympics and won gold every time. The 42-year-old of Chino, California, could bring home a sixth gold medal from Paris, which would break a tie with Sue Bird for the most Olympic basketball golds ever. A sixth medal would also make Taurasi the most decorated team sport athlete in Olympic history.
Isosport/MB Media
Diana Taurasi during a basketball game between the women’s national teams of USA and Belgium at the FIBA Women’s Olympic Qualifying Tournament on Feb. 8, 2024.
Roberts has five world titles under her belt, but she's chasing her first Olympic gold medal. She's the favorite in the women's BMX freestyle after finishing second in Tokyo and, in 2019, Roberts became the first woman to land a 360 tailwhip in competition.
Roberts, 22, is from Buchanan, Michigan.
ATTILA KISBENEDEK
Hannah Roberts competes during the Cycling BMX Freestyle Women’s Park Final of the Olympic Qualifier Series 2024 at the Ludovica Campus of Budapest, Hungary on June 22, 2024.
Jahmal Harvey: Boxing
This will be Jahmal Harvey's first appearance at the Olympics, although he won a world title in 2021 and a Pan American Games gold medal in 2023.
After the U.S. men brought home three boxing silver medals in Tokyo, the expectation is for Team USA to continue its success in the ring in Paris.
Harvey, 21, is from Oxon Hill, Maryland.
RAUL ARBOLEDA
Jahmal Harvey poses with the gold medal at the men’s 57kg gold medal final boxing event during the Pan American Games Santiago 2023 at the Olympic Training Centre (CEO) on October 27, 2023.
Victor Montalvo: Breaking
Victor Montalvo is the top American in the Olympics' newest sport. And while break dancing has been his passion since he was 10, the Olympics were never on his radar.
Mike Coppola
Victor Montalvo
When the International Olympic Committee announced the sport would make its debut in Paris in 2024, that all changed and made him determined to qualify for Team USA.
Montalvo, 30, is from Kissimmee, Florida.
Nevin Harrison: Canoeing
Nevin Harrison was the first U.S. woman to win an Olympic canoeing gold in Tokyo and will defend the title in Paris. The 22-year-old from Seattle has also picked up two world titles.
Mike Coppola
Nevin Harrison
Lee Kiefer: Fencing
In Tokyo, Kiefer won the third gold medal for Team USA and the third fencing gold medal in the country's history.
Kiefer, a four-time NCAA champion at Notre Dame, placed fifth in London in 2012 and was 10th at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016. Her husband, Gerek Meinhardt, won bronze with the U.S. team in foil at the 2016 Olympics.
Kiefer, 30, is from Lexington, Kentucky.
Mike Coppola
Lee Kiefer
Nick Itkin: Fencing
Nick Itkin is a fellow Notre Dame grad and was the youngest American fencer in Tokyo when the men's foil team won bronze. Now, at 24, he's the favorite to win individual foil gold in Paris and could be a key player in Team USA's mission to win the foil team gold medal.
Itkin, 30, is from Los Angeles.
ERNESTO BENAVIDES
Nick Itkin poses with the gold medal during the podium ceremony of the men’s foil individual fencing event of the Pan American Games Santiago 2023 on October 31, 2023.
Xander Schauffele: Golf
Xander Schauffele will also look to defend his gold medal from Tokyo, following his top-10 finish in this year's Masters Tournaments.
Schauffele, 30, of San Diego, California, is ranked No. 3 in the Official World Golf Ranking.
Xinhua News Agency
Gold medalist Xander Schauffele of the United States bites his medal during the awarding ceremony of the men’s individual stroke play of golf match at Tokyo 2020 Olympics in Saitama, Japan, on Aug. 1, 2021.
Simone Biles: Gymnastics
All eyes will be on Simone Biles in Paris, where she could become the most decorated American gymnast in Olympic history with one more medal.
Biles, 27, of Spring, Texas, has the potential to bring her Olympic medal count to 12 at this year's event.
Fred Richard: Gymnastics
Fred Richard posted the highest score at the 2023 World Gymnastics Championships, helping the team earn bronze, the team's first in nine years.
Richard, 20, of Stoughton, Massachusetts, also earned a bronze medal in the all-around, which made him the fourth all-around medalist in history for the American men's gymnastics team.
Anadolu
Frederick Richard competes on the pommel horse during the men’s U.S. Olympic Gymnastics Trials on June 29, 2024.
Kara Kohler: Rowing
Kohler is an Olympic veteran, winning bronze at the London Olympics in the quadruple sculls before shifting to single sculls. She won third place at World Cup II and fourth at 2023 Worlds.
Kohler, 33, is from Clayton, California.
Naomi Baker
Kara Kohler competes during the Women’s Single Sculls in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Sea Forest Waterway on July 25, 2021, in Tokyo, Japan.
Ilona Maher: Rugby
Team center Ilona Maher, the breakout social media star on TikTok at the Tokyo Olympics, will return to the Team USA rugby team at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Maher, 27, of Burlington, Vermont, is a member of a 12-person team, which is led by co-captains Lauren Doyle and Naya Tapper, and includes Olympians Alev Kelter Lauren Doyle, Kayla Canett, Kristi Kirshe, Ariana Ramsey, and Naya Tapper.
The team will look to win the USA Women's Rugby Sevens' first Olympic medal ever, 100 years after the USA won the last Olympic gold in rugby.
Mike Coppola
Ilona Maher
Vincent Hancock: Shooting
The most decorated Olympic skeet shooter of all time, Hancock has three gold medals in an event no one else has won more than once. Hancock, who aims to retire at the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028, already trains a new generation of U.S. shooters at his complex near Fort Worth, Texas.
Hancock could make Olympic history for the U.S. in Paris, where he could become one of six American shooters with at least four gold medals in the sport.
Hancock, 35, is from Eatonton, Georgia.
Xinhua News Agency
Vincent Hancock competes during the skeet men’s final at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan, July 26, 2021.
Gavin Bottger: Skateboarding
Gavin Bottger is a 17-year-old rising star in men's park who recently won the Dew Tour and won several X Games medals.
He's from Vista, California.
Zhe Ji
Gavin Bottger competes during the Men’s Park prelims round of the Skateboarding competition at the 2024 Olympic Qualifier Series on May 17, 2024, in Shanghai, China.
Jagger Eaton: Skateboarding
Jagger Eaton, 23, earned a bronze medal in men's street in Tokyo — and that was with a broken ankle. He's recently won X Games and world titles in men's park and is ranked second in the world rankings, behind Bottger.
He's from Mesa, Arizona.
Lintao Zhang
Jagger Eaton competes during the Skateboarding Men’s Street Final at the Olympic Qualifier Series Shanghai on May 19, 2024, in Shanghai, China.
Nyjah Huston: Skateboarding
After a seventh-place finish in Tokyo and tearing his ACL while filming a video in 2022, Nyjah Huston is returning to the Olympics as a favorite for gold in men's street.
Huston, 29, is from Davis, California.
Fred Lee
Nyjah Huston of the United States competes during the Skateboarding Men’s Street Semifinal at the Olympic Qualifier Series Shanghai on May 18, 2024.
Trinity Rodman: Women's soccer
Trinity Rodman was one of the three forwards who played with Alex Morgan and Sophia Smith in the 2023 Women's World Cup. Although the daughter of NBA Hall of Famer Dennis Rodman has only been on the national team for two years, she could make an impact with goals and assists as a winger.
Rodman, 21, is from Newport Beach, California.
Erin Chang/ISI Photos/USSF
Trinity Rodman #22 of the United States shoots the ball during an international friendly game between Korea Republic and USWNT at Allianz Field on June 4, 2024.
Sam Watson: Sport climbing
Sam Watson broke the speed climbing world record twice at a World Cup event in April, making him a gold medal contender in Paris.
The 18-year-old hails from Southlake, Texas.
PABLO VERA
Sam Watson poses after winning the gold medal during the podium ceremony of the men’s speed final climbing event during the Pan American Games on Oct. 22, 2023.
Natalia Grossman: Sport climbing
Natalia Grossman is the 2021 world champion in bouldering and won gold in a combined event of bouldering and lead climbing at last year's Pan American Games.
Grossman, 23, is from Santa Cruz, California.
PABLO VERA
Natalia Grossman competes in the boulder stage during the sport climbing women’s boulder & lead final of the Pan American Games Santiago on Oct. 24, 2023.
Jack Alexy: Swimming
Jack Alexy made a name for himself as a top male sprint swimmer at the 2023 World Swimming Championships, where he earned silver medals in the 50m and 100m freestyle events and earned three medals on U.S. relay teams.
Alexy, 21, is from Morristown, New Jersey.
Sarah Stier
Jack Alexy reacts after the Men’s 100m freestyle final at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Swimming Trials on June 19, 2024.
Caeleb Dressel: Swimming
At the U.S. Olympic trials, Caeleb Dressel earned two individual races at the Paris Olympics — the 50m freestyle and 100m butterfly.
Dressel, who took home five gold medals from Tokyo, finished third in the 100 freestyle, relegating him to the relay for that distance.
In the aftermath of his Tokyo success, Dressel stunningly walked away from swimming during the 2022 world championships. He later revealed what a toll the sport had taken on him, saying he needed an extended break to rediscover his passion at the pool.
Dressel, 27, is from Orange Park, Florida.
Al Bello
Caeleb Dressel reacts after winning the men’s 100-meter butterfly final at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Swimming Trials.
Katie Ledecky: Swimming
At the U.S. Olympic trials, Katie Ledecky won all four of her freestyle events, ranging from 200 to 1,500 meters, and she'll again be the face of the American team as she competes in her fourth Olympics.
Ledecky, who is just the ninth U.S. swimmer to qualify at least four times for the sport's grandest stage, won't swim the 200, an event that produced only a fifth-place finish in Tokyo. She'll need to improve on her times in the 400 to have a shot at gold in that star-studded event.
But she remains the favorite in the 800 — an event where she'll be going for a four-peat — and the 1,500.
The 27-year-old Ledecky, who's from Bethesda, Maryland, already has six individual gold medals — more than any female swimmer in Olympic history — and an overall haul of 10 medals that includes seven golds.
Video below: Why do they do it? Here's the athletes' motivation
Kate Douglass: Swimming
Kate Douglass is regarded as one of the world's most versatile swimmers.
The 22-year-old from Pelham, New York, has claimed spots in three individual races in Paris: the 200m breaststroke, 100m freestyle and 200m individual medley. She'll also be a key performer on the relays.
She has all the makings of being the breakout American star in Paris, leading the charge to take down the powerhouse Australian women's team.
Al Bello
Kate Douglass of the United States competes in the Women’s 200-meter individual medley final at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Swimming Trials.
Regan Smith: Swimming
Regan Smith is a former world record holder in the 100m and 200m backstroke and is a gold medal favorite for the 200m butterfly.
Smith, 22, of Lakeville, Minnesota, made her Olympic debut in Tokyo, bringing home three medals. She'll aim to net her first gold medal from Paris.
Maddie Meyer
Regan Smith reacts during the Women’s 100m backstroke final medal ceremony at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Swimming Trials on June 18, 2024.
Carissa Moore: Surfing
Carissa Moore is the reigning Olympic gold medalist and five-time world champion for the 2024 Olympic surfing event, which will take place in Tahiti. The 31-year-old from Honolulu plans to step away from competition after this year's Olympics.
JEROME BROUILLET
Surfer Carissa Moore competes in the women’s quarterfinal round of the Shiseido Tahiti Pro surfing competition on May 29, 2024.
CJ Nickolas: Taekwondo
CJ Nickolas earned silver at last year's World Championships and a gold medal at the 2023 Pan American Games, making him a rising star and medal contender in Paris.
The 22-year-old is from Brentwood, California.
JAVIER TORRES
CJ Nickolas competes against Colombia´s Miguel Angel Trejos in the men’s Kyorugi -80kg final taekwondo event of the Pan American Games on Oct. 22, 2022.
Coco Gauff: Tennis
Coco Gauff was supposed to play in 2020, but had to withdraw after testing positive for COVID-19. Since then, she earned runner-up at the 2022 French Open in singles and doubles and won her first Grand Slam trophy at the U.S. Open in 2023.
The 20-year-old is from Delray Beach, Florida.
Rob Newell - CameraSport
Coco Gauff during her Ladies’ Second Round match during The Championships Wimbledon 2024 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club on July 3, 2024.
Ryan Crouser: Track and field
In Paris, Ryan Crouser will attempt to become the first three-time Olympic champion in shot put history.
Crouser, 31, of Boring, Oregon, won gold in Rio and Tokyo and has won three world titles.
Patrick Smith
Ryan Crouser competes in the men’s shot put final at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field on June 22, 2024.
Noah Lyles: Track and field
The hopes are high for Noah Lyles to be a big winner for Team USA in Paris. He became the first man since Usain Bolt to win gold in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay at the 2023 World Athletics Championships.
Lyles, 26, of Alexandria, Virginia, won bronze in Tokyo in the 200m.
Christian Petersen
Noah Lyles competes in the men’s 200 meter semi-final at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field on June 28, 2024.
Anna Hall: Track and field
Although Anna Hall doesn't have Olympic experience, she's on a mission for the heptathlon in Paris and could be the third American woman to medal in the event.
After crashing out in hurdles at the U.S. trials, she missed out on the Tokyo Games. But since then, she's earned two world medals.
Hall, 23, is from Highlands Ranch, Colorado.
Christian Petersen
Anna Hall poses with a gold medal after competing in the women’s heptathlon at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field on June 24, 2024.
Sha’Carri Richardson: Track and field
Sha'Carri Richardson will head to Paris in hopes of redeeming what she could have accomplished in Tokyo.
A positive marijuana test cost her the chance to compete in the last Olympics and since then, she's won the 100m gold medal at the 2023 World Track and Field Championships and led the U.S. women to gold in the 4x100m relay.
If her success continues in 2024, Richardson, 24, of Dallas, could become the first American woman to win a gold medal in the women's 100m since the 1996 games in Athens.
Patrick Smith
Sha’Carri Richardson competes in the first round of the women’s 200 meters at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field on June 27, 2024.
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone: Track and field
During U.S. Olympic trials, 24-year-old Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone lowered the world record for the 400-meter hurdles course for the fifth time and broke her last record by .03 seconds.
The latest record doesn’t so much reset the storyline for the Olympics — McLaughlin-Levrone would’ve been the big-time favorite either way — as it forces track to once again rethink what’s possible.
McLaughlin-Levrone's performance at the U.S. Olympic trials was only her fourth 400 hurdles race of the season, as she geared back up from a year of running sprints. She also has the best time in the world this year (48.75) in the regular 400, which does nothing to diminish the U.S. team's already strong chances of winning the 4x400 relay at the end of the Olympic track meet.
McLaughlin-Levrone is from Dunellen, New Jersey.
Charlie Neibergall
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone poses for a photo after winning the women’s 400-meter hurdles final during the U.S. Track and Field Olympic Team Trials on June 30, 2024, in Eugene, Oregon.
Jordan Larson: Volleyball
Jordan Larson, outside hitter and captain of the U.S. women's national team, will hope to bring home a second gold medal from Paris.
Larson, 37, of Hooper, Nebraska, is a three-time Olympian. She was part of the team that brought home bronze in 2012, a silver in 2016 and a gold medal from Tokyo.
Mike Coppola
Volleyball athlete Jordan Larson poses for a portrait during the 2024 Team USA Media Summit.
Ashleigh Johnson: Water polo
Ashleigh Johnson has already won two Olympic gold medals as the goalkeeper of the U.S. team, along with four world titles. She'll aim to bring home a third gold medal from Paris.
Johnson, 29, is from Miami, Florida.
Ronald Martinez
Ashleigh Johnson before a water polo exhibition match against China at Long Beach City College on April 22, 2024.
Aaron Brooks: Wrestling
At the U.S. Olympic trials, Aaron Brooks upset reigning world and Olympic champion David Taylor to secure his spot on the roster for his first Olympic games.
Brooks just won his fourth consecutive NCAA title at Penn State University and won a U23 world title last year.
Brooks, 24, is from Hagerstown, Maryland.
Tim Nwachukwu
Aaron Brooks reacts after defeating Zahid Valenica in the men’s freestyle 86kg division during the U.S. Olympic Wrestling Trials held at the Bryce Jordan Center on April 19, 2024, in State College, Pennsylvania.
Amit Elor: Wrestling
Amit Elor could become the next American woman to earn a gold medal in wrestling, following in the footsteps of Helen Maroulis in 2016 and Tamyra Mensah-Stock in 2020.
Elor, 20, of Walnut Creek, California, has won back-to-back world titles at 72kg. Since that isn't an Olympic weight class, she'll compete at 68kg in Paris.
Kadir Caliskan - United World Wrestling
Amit Elor celebrates winning the women’s wrestling - 72kg weight bronze medal match of the Wrestling Senior World Championships on September 21, 2023.