As the Miami Heat prepare to open their 2025-26 regular season next Wednesday in Orlando, head coach Erik Spoelstra addressed his recent appointment as head coach of the USA men’s national team for the 2025–28 cycle.
In a press release issued Tuesday by USA Basketball, Spoelstra said the honor deeply resonates with him.
“It’s an incredible honor to be named head coach of the USA Basketball Men’s National Team,” Spoelstra said. “Representing our country and leading world-class athletes to marquee competitions is one of the greatest privileges in sport. I look forward to carrying on the tradition of excellence and teamwork that defines USA Basketball.”
Spoelstra’s new role will see him leading the U.S. men at the 2027 FIBA World Cup in Doha, Qatar, and at the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. He also will helm training camps and USA Basketball Showcase exhibitions ahead of those events.
Erik Spoelstra expresses gratitude as leaders endorse his Team USA role

USA Basketball leadership praised the selection, citing Spoelstra’s long NBA track record and existing ties to the national program.
“I have known Erik Spoelstra for the better part of two decades and have gotten to know him better throughout our time with USA Basketball,” Hill said. “Spo is not only an outstanding coach, but a great colleague, friend and father, all of which make him the perfect choice to continue the USA Basketball Men’s National Team coaching legacy through 2028.”
“Erik Spoelstra is one of the most widely respected head coaches around the game of basketball,” USA Basketball CEO Jim Tooley said. “As the longest tenured coach with one team, along with his involvement with USA Basketball the past several years, he is well positioned to lead the USA Men’s National Team at the 2027 FIBA World Cup and 2028 Olympic Games.”
“On behalf of the USA Basketball Board of Directors, we welcome Erik Spoelstra as the USA Men’s National Team head coach,” USA Basketball Chairman Gen. (Ret.) Martin Dempsey said. “Erik is a proven winner in both the NBA and in international basketball competition. He is also a gifted leader. We are grateful he has agreed to take on this challenge for USA Basketball and for his country.”
Spoelstra’s decorated Heat career and Olympic experience highlight his readiness for the role
Spoelstra’s long tenure in Miami underscores why USA Basketball opted for continuity. Earlier this month, he embarked on his 18th season as head coach of the Heat, making him the longest-tenured active head coach in the NBA with one franchise. During that span he has guided the team to NBA championships in 2012 and 2013 and six total Finals appearances, most recently in 2023. He first joined the Heat organization in 1995 as a video coordinator and was an assistant coach during Miami’s 2006 title run.
His international résumé also extends beyond being named USA’s top coach. He was an assistant coach when the U.S. men won Olympic gold in Paris in 2024, served on the coaching staff at the 2023 FIBA World Cup (when the U.S. finished fourth), and led the 2021 USA Basketball Men’s Select Team that trained alongside the 2020 national team ahead of the Tokyo Olympics.
The U.S. men’s team enters the new cycle carrying a storied legacy: 17 Olympic gold medals (including five straight from 2008–2024) and five world titles, most recently in 2014. Spoelstra’s selection is subject to approval by the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee, and USA Basketball will unveil additional staff and schedule details at a future date.
For the Heat, the appointment brings added expectations. Spoelstra now must balance national responsibilities with the daily demands of leading Miami. The team’s season-opening game in Orlando looms, and his focus there will remain firm even amid new obligations on the international stage.