
Stephen Curry will be joining Olympic teammates LeBron James and Kevin Durant once again, this time at the NBA All-Star Game.
The league announced the rosters for this season’s midseason showcase event Tuesday night, splitting 25 names onto three squads. It’s the debut of another new All-Star format — this one U.S. vs. World, on Feb. 15 at the LA Clippers’ home in Inglewood, California.
🇺🇸 USA STARS. USA STRIPES. WORLD. 🌍
Presenting the 2026 NBA All-Star Game Rosters!
The three teams will compete in a round-robin tournament with the top two teams advancing to the championship game.
🌟 Sunday, Feb. 15, 5pm/et, NBC and Peacock pic.twitter.com/lhwz8lY9Wu
— NBA (@NBA) February 4, 2026
It’s a concept that commissioner Adam Silver thinks will tap into national pride for the players and comes at a fitting time. The game will be aired on NBC, which is also broadcasting the Milan Cortina Olympics that start later this week and run through Feb. 22.
The U.S.-vs.-World concept was talked about for years before becoming a reality this season. The NBA and the National Basketball Players Association unveiled the long-awaited plan in their latest attempt to spark renewed interest in the game following a largely panned tournament format last season.
The Clippers’ Kawhi Leonard, likely the most deserving name left off the original list of 24 All-Stars, was added to the pool of U.S. players Tuesday shortly before the rosters were unveiled. And that move was likely what sent New York’s Karl-Anthony Towns to the World team.
Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokounmpo is not expected to play for the World team because of injury, which is why that squad has nine players.
The U.S. teams were split by age: The older players were assigned to USA Stripes, coached by San Antonio’s Mitch Johnson, the younger ones to USA Stars, coached by Detroit’s J.B. Bickerstaff. Toronto’s Darko Rajakovic was named coach of the World team earlier Tuesday.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.








