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Olympics: Basketball

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Basketball has been played at the Olympic Games for 80 years and is the rare team spectator sport that maintains its popularity when played at the Games. Although arguably as popular (or more popular) worldwide, baseball lasted just 16 years as an official Olympic sport (although it has been added to the 2020 Games), and Olympic football (soccer) loses some of its appeal because it does not feature the game’s biggest stars and is overshadowed by more-prestigious international tournaments such as the World Cup and European Championship. Basketball, on the other hand, features top talent from around the globe playing the game at the highest level and has become one of the showcase events of every Olympiad—the women’s and men’s tournament finals take place on the second-to-last and last days of the Olympics, respectively, to serve as dual grand finales for a given Games.

(Read James Naismith's 1929 Britannica essay on his invention of basketball.)

As the founding nation of the sport and home to the National Basketball Association (NBA), the world’s top professional league, the United States has unsurprisingly dominated Olympic basketball. The U.S. men’s team has won gold medals in 14 of the 18 competitions leading up to the 2016 Games, and the women’s team has won 7 of the 10 tournaments (the women’s event was added in 1976). The sport was played by amateurs until the 1992 Barcelona Games, which were the first Olympics to allow NBA players to participate in the event. As a result, the U.S. put together the “Dream Team,” made up of some of the greatest basketball players of all time—including Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Charles Barkley, and Karl Malone—and it dominated the tournament (no opposing team got closer than 32 points in the final margin of all eight American victories) en route to a gold medal. The Dream Team helped spur an explosion in basketball popularity around the globe and subsequently led to an influx of international talent into the NBA in the early 21st century.

The United States continued to field teams with NBA players (and, for the women’s teams, WNBA players) during ensuing Olympiads, which almost always ended in gold medals for the country, but none of them had the seismic impact of the original Dream Team. Nevertheless, the 2016 men’s team still features such superstars as Kevin Durant and Carmelo Anthony, the latter of whom is participating in a U.S.-record fourth straight Olympics basketball tournament.