Index  ›  sport  ›  Forbes
sport · Forbes ↗

Karch Kiraly Has One More Olympic Mountain To Climb At LA28

Forbes Published Jul 8, 2026 Reviewed Jul 8, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Karch Kiraly, a triple Olympic gold medalist as a player (1984, 1988 indoor; 1996 beach), became the first athlete to win Olympic gold in both indoor and beach volleyball.
3 Olympic gold medals · Karch Kiraly1 first athlete · Karch Kiraly
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The United States men's national volleyball team earned bronze medals at both the Rio 2016 and Paris 2024 Olympic Games, with its only loss in Paris being a 15–13 fifth-set defeat to Poland in the semifinals.
2 bronze medals · United States men's national volleyball team15 points · USA men's volleyball team13 points · Poland men's volleyball team
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Karch Kiraly led the United States women's national volleyball team to its first Olympic gold medal in Tokyo and a silver medal in Paris, completing a 16-year tenure with the program.
1 gold medal · United States women's national volleyball team1 silver medal · United States women's national volleyball team
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Karch Kiraly stated that the USA Men's National Volleyball Team’s only loss in the Paris 2024 Olympics was a 15–13 fifth-set defeat to Poland in the semifinals, limiting their finish to bronze.
1 loss · USA Men's National Volleyball Team15 points · USA Men's National Volleyball Team13 points · Poland Men's National Volleyball Team
View source ↗

Volleyball legend Karch Kiraly, a triple Olympic gold medalist as a player and who led the US Women's team to Olympic gold and silver, now helms the US Men's National Team for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. Southern California, a long-standing volleyball mecca, provides the backdrop. Kiraly aims to elevate the men's team, which earned bronze in the last two Olympics, stating they are "hungry to stand a little higher on the podium." He emphasizes building strong relationships and understanding players, prioritizing people over tactics, to forge the strongest possible team. Kiraly, feeling his work with the women's team was complete, embraces this new challenge, aiming for gold on home soil.

(This is part one of a two-part story based on a Forbes exclusive interview with Karch Kiraly July 3, 2026. All quotes are taken directly from a transcript of the interview.)

The road to the 2028 Olympic Games officially runs through Los Angeles. For volleyball, however, it has been running through Southern California for decades. The sport is deeply woven into the fabric of the region. Beach volleyball icons emerged from the sands of Manhattan Beach. Elite indoor athletes sharpened their skills in packed gyms stretching from Orange County to the San Fernando Valley. Thousands of aspiring Olympians spend weekends competing in tournaments where dozens of courts fill cavernous convention centers and athletic facilities.

Few venues better symbolize that pipeline than the American Sports Center in Anaheim, where club tournaments routinely draw families from across the country. It is one familiar to Karch Kiraly: Southern California continues to be a mecca for developing and producing the next generation of Olympic hopefuls.

It was fitting, then, that Kiraly was speaking from Anaheim as preparations continue for another Olympic cycle, one that may become the defining chapter of an extraordinary career.

For nearly half a century, Kiraly has stood at the center of American volleyball excellence.

As a player, he won Olympic gold medals indoors in 1984 and 1988 before redefining beach volleyball by capturing another Olympic title in 1996, becoming the first athlete to win Olympic gold in both disciplines. As a coach, he guided the United States women's national team to its first Olympic gold medal in Tokyo before adding a silver medal in Paris three years later.

Now, with less than two years remaining before Los Angeles welcomes the world, Kiraly has accepted perhaps the most intriguing challenge of his career: leading the United States men's national team onto the Olympic stage in front of a home crowd that will hope for more than another bronze medal.

"We're hungry to stand a little higher on the podium," Kiraly said during the interview.

It is a simple statement, but one that reveals the mindset surrounding a program that believes it has been much closer to Olympic gold than recent medal counts suggest. The United States earned bronze medals at both the Rio 2016 and Paris 2024 Olympic Games. To outsiders, those finishes confirmed America's place among the world's volleyball elite. Inside the national team, they represented opportunities that slipped away by the narrowest of margins.

"The only loss the USA men had in Paris was in the semifinals," Kiraly said, recalling the heartbreaking 15–13 fifth-set defeat to Poland. "That meant the best we could finish was third, and we did exactly that."

That perspective is one reason USA Volleyball turned to the sport's most accomplished figure following the conclusion of his remarkable tenure with the women's national team. His résumé of wins and losses speaks for itself, but even more important was the winning culture he built over sixteen years inside the women's program.

"I felt like my work with the women was done," Kiraly explained. "I was excited for a new challenge."

That challenge was not rebuilding a struggling program. Far from it. Former head coach John Speraw had established one of the strongest men's national programs in the world. The Americans possessed experienced leadership, world-class talent and a locker room that consistently competed with volleyball's traditional powers, including Poland, Italy, Brazil and France. "There was nothing broken with the program," Kiraly said. "It's a really good group of guys." Instead of overhauling systems or dramatically changing tactics, Kiraly spent much of his first season listening.

"2025 was a year of learning," he said. "Learning these people, learning about them both as people and about their families, and also learning about them as players."

That answer may have been the most revealing of the entire conversation. Championship coaches often speak about systems, rotations, analytics or match strategy. Kiraly began somewhere entirely different—with relationships.

The day before our interview, the national team held what Kiraly described as an informal family day inside the gym. Wives, fiancées and children mingled around practice while players prepared for another international competition.

"We probably had six or seven kids in the gym," Kiraly said. "It was just awesome."

Moments like that rarely appear on television broadcasts, but they reveal something important about how Kiraly approaches leadership. For him, building an Olympic team begins long before the first serve. It begins by understanding the people who will eventually have to trust one another when an Olympic semifinal hangs in the balance.

That philosophy may prove particularly valuable over the next two years as veterans and emerging stars compete for roster spots on a team that believes playing at home presents a once-in-a-generation opportunity.

Kiraly's challenge is not simply identifying the twelve best volleyball players in America.

That distinction could determine whether the United States finally climbs from bronze to gold when the Olympic spotlight returns to Los Angeles.

This article was originally published by Forbes ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error