LeBron James is a professional basketball player for the Los Angeles Lakers . / Photo: Reuters

Simone Biles and LeBron James lead the list of athletes likely to compete at their final Olympics.

Add in that Andy Murray will be retiring after the Paris Games and that Rafael Nadal may bid goodbye to tennis, too, and the stage is set for some emotional, high-profile goodbyes.

Here’s a look at some of the top competitors expected to say “adieu” to the Olympics—or their sport in general—in the French capital:

Simone Biles

Simone Biles has 37 Olympic and World Championship medals. Photo: Reuters 

At 27, Biles is the oldest American woman to make an Olympic gymnastics team since the 1950s.

Having returned from a two-year break last summer, Biles can add to her career haul of seven Olympic medals—four of them gold—when she competes at the Bercy Arena.

LeBron James

At 39, James is about to become the first U.S. men’s basketball player to compete at the Olympics in three different decades.

To get an idea of what stage he’s at in his career, consider this: When James and the U.S. team opened their Olympic training camp in Las Vegas, his son, Bronny, was making his pro debut for the Los Angeles Lakers in the California Classic summer league.

Andy Murray and Rafael Nadal

Murray’s goodbye to Wimbledon didn’t go the way he had hoped. The British player is hoping for a better result in the Olympic tennis competition on the red clay of Roland Garros, home of the French Open.

Andy Murray has struggled with injuries in recent years. Photo: Reuters 

Paris will mark Murray’s fifth Olympics, having won back-to-back singles golds in 2012 and 2016.

While Murray has indicated that he plans to end his career after the Olympics, Nadal’s status is less clear. But playing the Olympics at the site where he won 14 French Opens—and where there’s a statue of him outside Court Philippe Chatrier—will be special no matter what Nadal does next.

Nadal has won Olympic gold in both singles (in 2008) and doubles (in 2016) and will team up with Carlos Alcaraz for doubles in Paris.

Shelly-Anne Fraser Pryce

Jamaican sprinter Fraser-Pryce has announced that the Paris Games will be her fifth and final Olympics.

The 37-year-old Fraser-Pryce, who has won eight Olympic medals, wants to spend more time with her husband and 6-year-old son, Zyon. Fraser-Pryce will run against Sha’Carri Richardson in the 100 metres.

Shelly-Anne Fraser Pryce is regarded as one of the greatest sprinters of all time. Photo: 

Gianmarco Tamberi

One of the biggest showmen in track and field, the Italian high jumper Tamberi wants to go out on top by defending the gold medal that he shared with his good friend Mutaz Barshim in Tokyo. Both Tamberi and Barshim have indicated that this will be their final Olympics.

Sarah Sjöström

At age 30, Swedish swimming standout Sjöström will be competing in her fifth Olympics. A winner of four medals at the Olympics, Sjöström is focusing on one individual event in Paris. She’ll race the 50-metre freestyle—an event she holds the world record in—plus three relays. Sjöström made her Olympic debut in Beijing in 2008 at the age of 14.

Tom Daley

Daley was Britain’s youngest athlete in 2008, at 14. Three years ago in Tokyo, he won his first Olympic gold with partner Matty Lee in 10-metre synchronised, and now he’s back for a fifth Olympics. Daley drew attention to knitting between dives in Tokyo as a way of relaxing.

Tom Daley has won four Olympic gold medals in swimming. Photo: Reuters 

Mikkel Hansen

With his shoulder-length hair and headband, the powerful left back Hansen is one of the most familiar faces in Danish sports. A three-time men’s world player of the year, a record he shares with longtime rival Nikola Karabatić, Hansen is considered one of the best handball players ever. He led Denmark to gold in Rio and then silver in Tokyo.

Teddy Riner

The French heavyweight judoka Riner is one of France’s top medal hopes. He's looking to add to his haul of five Olympic medals, including three golds. He's also won a record 11 golds at worlds.

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AP