Episodes

  • Kyle Anderson’s China Journey: From Team USA Cut to Leading Team China 🇨🇳 | Identity, Culture & Hoops
    Mar 27 2026

    What happens when an NBA vet discovers his roots… and ends up representing an entire nation?

    In this episode of Pacific Rims, Ric Bucher and Greg Stolt sit down with Kyle Anderson—aka Li Kaier—to unpack one of the most unique stories in global basketball.

    From tracing his ancestry back to Shenzhen… to becoming a naturalized Chinese citizen… to leading China men's national basketball team at the FIBA World Cup—this is bigger than basketball.

    It’s about identity, culture, and what it really means to represent something greater than yourself.

    💥 PLUS:

    • The REAL difference between NBA and FIBA basketball

    • The culture shock of Team China vs NBA life

    • Why international basketball demands higher IQ + team play

    • How China can become a global basketball power


    ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS

    0:00 – Welcome to Pacific Rims 🌏

    0:50 – Introducing Kyle Anderson (Li Kaier)

    1:30 – Sponsor: New Air Club ✈️

    2:00 – Discovering his Chinese ancestry

    3:30 – Family roots: Shenzhen → Jamaica → NBA

    5:00 – Becoming a Chinese citizen & joining Team China

    6:00 – Getting CUT from Team USA & motivation 🔥

    7:00 – Representing China at the World Cup

    9:00 – Language barriers & bonding without words

    10:00 – Culture shock: NBA luxury vs national team grind

    12:00 – Why FIBA basketball is tougher mentally

    14:00 – Communication, coaching & international systems

    17:00 – Future with Team China & World Cup goals

    18:00 – How China can become a basketball powerhouse

    19:30 – Life in China, food & culture (hot pot 🔥)

    21:00 – Would Kyle play in the CBA?

    23:00 – Identity, heritage & family connection

    25:30 – UCLA roots & Pauley Pavilion memories

    26:30 – Post-interview analysis: global hoops evolution

    32:00 – Americans thriving overseas 🌏

    37:00 – Future guests + closing thoughts


    🌏 KEY THEMES
    • Global basketball is evolving—and identity is part of the game
    • The NBA isn’t the only path to impact
    • Culture, connection, and competition are colliding
    ✈️ SPONSOR

    This episode is powered by New Air Club—the ultimate door-to-door private aviation service.

    Skip the hassle. Travel like a pro team.

    👉 Learn more: newairclub.com





    🔥 HASHTAGS

    #KyleAnderson #LiKaier #TeamChina #NBAGlobal #FIBA #PacificRims #UnitedWeCast

    #BasketballCulture #ChinaBasketball #NBAInternational #GlobalHoops #CBA

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    39 mins
  • Andrew Gaze EXPOSES Global Hoops Reality: Why Asia Is Catching the NBA Faster Than You Think
    Mar 20 2026

    PROGRAMMING NOTE: In the video version of this episode, a clip of guest Andrew Gaze appearing on "Dancing With The Stars" is played; as a result, there is a brief stretch of silence in this audio-only version right around the two-minute mark.


    Australia’s GOAT Andrew Gaze joins Ric Bucher and Greg Stolt for a wildly revealing Pacific Rims episode that starts with Dancing with the Stars stories… and ends with a reality check on global basketball power.

    From surviving China trips with the Melbourne Tigers to breaking down how the Chinese Basketball Association has exploded in talent, facilities, and resources—Gaze explains why Asia is no longer “developing”… it’s arriving.

    He also pulls back the curtain on:

    • Why early international stars lacked NBA confidence (and today’s don’t)
    • How Australia quietly exported its basketball brain across Asia
    • The NIL era flipping global talent pipelines upside down
    • His biggest career regret: passing on the NBA when the door was open
    • And why today’s global game is more competitive—and more connected—than ever

    Plus: the hilarious origin story of Bucher nearly getting stranded in China… and saved by Gaze.

    If you think the NBA still owns basketball development, think again.

    ⏱️ TIME STAMPS

    00:00 Welcome to Pacific Rims

    00:52 Andrew Gaze intro + “Australia’s GOAT” claim

    01:10 New Air Club sponsor read

    02:00 Dancing with the Stars + beating Chris Hemsworth 👀

    06:37 Bucher’s China survival story (Gaze to the rescue)

    07:50 China’s basketball boom: talent, money, infrastructure

    10:40 Australia exporting coaches & elevating Asia

    13:30 Gaze’s Seton Hall journey + global recruiting evolution

    18:50 NCAA controversy + missed NBA opportunity

    21:30 Why early international players lacked NBA confidence

    24:30 Dirk, Dražen & the global breakthrough era

    28:00 NIL vs NBL: global talent war begins

    32:00 Coaching his son + “coachability” plug

    34:00 Yuki Kawamura + Japan’s rise (Bulls, national team)

    42:30 Asian Games cuts + parity problem

    45:00 Outro

    🏷️ HASHTAGS

    #PacificRims #AndrewGaze #InternationalBasketball #NBAGlobal #NBL #CBA #NIL #BasketballDevelopment #YaoMing #JapanBasketball #NBA #UnitedWeCast

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    46 mins
  • From England to the NBA to Japan's Women's League — Coach Tim Lewis Has Done It All (And Has No Plans to Stop)
    Mar 6 2026

    The globe-trotting coach who turned a struggling Japanese women's team into Empress Cup champions breaks down what it really takes to win — and survive — in basketball's most overlooked markets.

    He grew up playing rugby and cricket in England. He ended up coaching in the NBA. Now he's winning championships in Japan's women's pro league. Coach Tim Lewis joins Ric Bucher and Greg Stolt for one of the most wide-ranging conversations in Pacific Rims history — and every minute of it earns its place.

    Lewis unpacks the brutal realities of coaching overseas: bad translators that can sink a season, political agendas masquerading as basketball decisions in Thailand, and Japan's deep-seated resistance to change even when they hired him to change things. He's blunt, self-aware, and clearly still hungry.

    Then Ric and Greg break down the Asian World Cup Qualifying action from Okinawa — China's dramatic comebacks, Japan's debut under new coach Dai Oketani, and the increasingly loud question: is Korean guard Hyun-jung Li the next Asian star to crack the NBA? Plus: are Asian nations finally developing the global pathways that will make them competitive against Serbia, Germany, and the USA?

    If you care about the future of international basketball — this is the episode.


    ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS:

    • 0:00 – Intro & Sponsor (New Air Club Private Jet Service)
    • 0:51 – Introducing Coach Tim Lewis
    • 2:17 – From England to Don Bosco Tech to UNH — Tim's unlikely American journey
    • 3:33 – Playing to coaching: how a teaching background shaped his career
    • 5:04 – What does Great Britain basketball actually look like?
    • 6:23 – NBA expansion to London & Manchester: great idea or too soon?
    • 8:16 – Player & coaching pathways from Great Britain: growing, but not enough
    • 10:15 – What makes a coaching job worth taking?
    • 11:56 – From the G League to Belgium to Japan: navigating the global game
    • 13:27 – The #1 challenge of coaching in non-English speaking countries
    • 13:57 – How working with Chris Finch & the Timberwolves shaped his philosophy
    • 15:18 – Coaching women vs. coaching NBA players: what's actually different
    • 17:28 – The cultural challenge: Thailand's political agendas & Japan's rigidity
    • 22:10 – How to manage unrealistic expectations when you're an outsider coach
    • 25:01 – Tim's most rewarding coaching experience (the answer may surprise you)
    • 26:42 – SEGMENT: Asian World Cup Qualifying breakdown from Okinawa
    • 27:02 – China beats Japan: was it as dominant as it looked?
    • 29:50 – First look at new Japan coach Dai Okutani — fair assessment
    • 31:21 – Is Korean guard Lee Young an NBA prospect? The honest answer
    • 34:10 – Who gets credit for Lee Young's elite off-ball movement?
    • 35:54 – Are Asian nations finally building global development pathways?
    • 39:09 – The gap: what Asian teams do that will get punished by Serbia & the USA
    • 41:08 – Wrap-up


    #PacificRims #AsianBasketball #TimLewis #NBAAsia #JapanBasketball #KoreanBasketball #ChinaBasketball #WomensBasketball #WorldCupQualifying #OverseasCoaching #RicBucher #GregStolt

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    42 mins
  • Inside Asia’s Basketball Boom: Why China Isn’t Dominating, The Philippines’ Rise & The NBA’s Global Talent Hunt | Pacific Rims
    Feb 20 2026

    Why isn’t China producing more NBA stars? Which Asian country could become basketball’s next global powerhouse? And what really happens inside the NBA’s development system across Asia?

    In this revealing episode of Pacific Rims, NBA analyst Ric Bucher and Greg Stolt sit down with former NBA China technical director and Asia development specialist Craig Brown to break down the real state of basketball across China, Southeast Asia, and beyond.

    Brown shares behind-the-scenes insight into NBA academies in China, why Chinese player development faces structural challenges, why the Philippines could emerge as Asia’s basketball superpower, and how cultural differences shape global hoops success. From talent pipelines to coaching pressure to the importance of fun vs. discipline — this is a deep dive into how basketball is growing across the Pacific Rim.

    They also discuss global scouting, youth development challenges, NBA talent pathways, Japan’s national team changes, and a shocking gambling scandal connected to Chinese basketball.

    If you want to understand the future of global basketball — this episode is essential listening.

    Pacific Rims is presented by New Air Club — luxury door-to-door private jet service.

    Visit: newairclub.com


    ⏱️ Timestamps

    0:00 — Welcome to Pacific Rims

    0:56 — Sponsor: New Air Club private jet service

    1:46 — Craig Brown’s basketball and NBA Asia background

    3:05 — Inside NBA Asia & youth development programs

    4:00 — State of basketball in China today

    5:44 — Why Chinese players may be falling behind globally

    7:00 — Cultural pressure vs player development

    9:00 — Hong Kong vs China basketball experience

    9:58 — Why the Philippines loves basketball most

    11:04 — NBA academies & global scouting pipeline

    13:03 — Which Asian country could become a global power

    15:02 — What China must change to reach NBA level

    16:02 — Why “fun” matters in player development

    17:24 — How NBA grassroots programs work in Asia

    20:21 — Cultural barriers to basketball growth

    22:03 — Why China hasn’t produced another Yao Ming

    23:09 — Japan coaching change & national team impact

    30:14 — Gambling scandal tied to Chinese basketball

    35:02 — Why CBA style makes players vulnerable to betting influence

    37:21 — NBA gambling partnerships & risks

    40:30 — Future of global basketball integrity



    #PacificRims #RicBucher #CraigBrown #NBAGlobal #BasketballAsia #ChinaBasketball #PhilippinesBasketball #NBADevelopment #InternationalBasketball #Hoops #FIBA #CBA #UnitedWeCast

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    42 mins
  • KBL Culture Shock: Tyler Gatlin Explains Korea’s High-Pressure Hoops, Military Curveballs & Why Top Talent Leaves for Japan
    Feb 13 2026

    What’s it really like coaching basketball in South Korea—where the league runs on efficiency, hierarchy, and zero patience for underperforming imports?

    On this episode of Pacific Rims, Ric Bucher and Greg Stolt sit down with Tyler Gatlin (assistant coach, Goyang Sono Skygunners; former NBA/G League coach and international scout) to break down the Korean Basketball League (KBL) from the inside: the lifestyle, the food, the communication grind, and the tactical priorities that look nothing like what NBA fans assume.

    Then it gets deeper: Korea’s mandatory military service doesn’t just shape careers—it can derail them. Tyler explains how the “military team” works, what happens if a player doesn’t make it, and why medals can become a real-life basketball motivator. Plus: the truth about Korea’s best prospects—Ha Seung-jin as the NBA precedent, the rise of Lee Hyun-jung, and why Junseok Yeo (Seattle U) still faces the same national obligation.

    And in the second half, Ric and Greg zoom out to the bigger Asia hoops business: Greg’s AUBL plans (including the Philippines), why scheduling across countries is a nightmare, and what it takes to build a truly cross-border college basketball ecosystem.

    Presented by New Air Club (door-to-door private jet service).


    Time Stamps
    • 0:00 Pacific Rims intro: Asia-Pacific hoops, explained
    • 0:50 Tyler Gatlin joins + résumé (KBL / G League / scouting)
    • 1:02 Sponsor: New Air Club
    • 2:05 “Korea is awesome”—daily life, safety, efficiency, work culture
    • 4:07 Food talk: why Korean BBQ is “unrivaled” (and what makes it real)
    • 5:53 The hardest part as an American coach in the KBL
    • 6:42 Japan vs Korea: staff structure, concepts, and what’s valued on-court
    • 8:39 Film culture: watching full games, fewer pauses—different priorities
    • 9:10 Building relationships + introducing NBA ideas without resistance
    • 10:02 Language barrier + why speaking Korean changes everything
    • 11:14 AI + communication tools (helpful—but not “on the fly”)
    • 12:07 Import player rules: how the KBL keeps evolving (and why pressure is brutal)
    • 14:16 Why Tyler chose Korea (and why he came back)
    • 17:19 The KBL’s international ambition + the military reality hits
    • 18:59 Mandatory service explained: timelines, tryouts, military team vs no-play reality
    • 22:27 “Has a Korean-born player made the NBA?” Ha Seung-jin context
    • 23:15 The next wave: Lee Hyun-jung + Junseok Yeo and the NBA pathway
    • 24:33 Medal = exemption: why international tournaments carry extra stakes
    • 26:09 Why top Koreans leave (hint: not money—competition + growth)
    • 29:03 Korea’s college-to-pro timing: draft after season, rookies joining mid-semester
    • 33:10 Greg’s takeaway: Tyler’s rare value as a true cultural “bridge”
    • 36:03 AUBL expansion: why the Philippines is the key market
    • 40:04 The biggest obstacle: scheduling across Asia’s mismatched calendars
    • 43:15 Logistics reality: refs, staffing, visas, operations
    • 44:32 Why Greg’s doing it: college hoops is Asia’s missing development/business link
    • 46:39 Wrap + where to follow Pacific Rims

    #PacificRims #RicBucher #GregStolt #TylerGatlin #KBL #KoreanBasketball #GoyangSonoSkygunners #AsianBasketball #JapanBasketball #BLeague #GLeague #NBA #FIBA #HyunjungLee #JunseokYeo #HaSeungJin #PhilippinesBasketball #AUBL #NewAirClub

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    47 mins
  • Coaching Asia’s Hoops Cultures: Bruce Palmer on Japan’s “No Questions” Rule, China’s Chaos, Korea’s Blueprint | Pacific Rims
    Feb 5 2026


    What happens when an old-school Aussie hoops lifer drops into Japan, Korea, and China and realizes the basketball is the easy part?

    On this episode of Pacific Rims, co-hosts Ric Bucher and Greg Stolt welcome legendary coach Bruce Palmer to pull back the curtain on coaching across the Pacific Rim: why Japan demanded direct commands (not questions), how Korea’s league plan was executed “perfectly,” and why China’s basketball ecosystem can swing from NBA dreams to “who paid for the certificate?” in the same breath.

    Palmer shares the cultural landmines translators can’t save you from, the behind-the-scenes truth about player development, and a wild personal story from the 2011 Japan earthquake—including the moment he realized Fukushima had blown up… after he’d gone golfing.

    If you want the real story of Asian basketball, this is it: structure vs. volatility, development vs. politics, and coaching when everything is out of your control.

    00:00 — Pacific Rims intro & episode setup

    01:31 — Introducing Coach Bruce Palmer

    01:58 — Coaching across Japan, Korea & China

    02:20 — Japan: no irony, no questions, direct commands

    03:31 — Cultural clash: “Just tell them what to do”

    05:49 — Japan leagues merge → foundation of today’s B.League

    07:08 — Why Japan’s development model worked

    07:45 — Korea: tough play, big crowds, executed plan

    09:23 — NBA school in China & grassroots development

    11:16 — China tryouts: instant NBA expectations

    12:46 — “If the water’s too clean, the fish will die”

    15:00 — Coaching across cultures: what really matters

    20:17 — 2011 Japan earthquake experience

    22:13 — “Fukushima blew up” realization

    24:25 — Imports, NBA experience & raising local talent

    28:06 — China owner story that defines the chaos

    31:49 — Legacy, impact & coaching beyond basketball

    35:09 — Final takeaways & closing



    #PacificRims #RicBucher #GregStolt #BrucePalmer #AsianBasketball #JapanBasketball #BLeague #ChinaBasketball #CBA #KoreaBasketball #NBL #InternationalBasketball #BasketballCoaching #HoopsCulture #GlobalBasketball #UnitedWeCastNetwork

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    36 mins
  • Why Yuta Watanabe Quit the NBA for Japan’s B.League — and What It Says About Asian Hoops NOW
    Jan 30 2026

    An NBA player opting out to go home is rare — but Yuta Watanabe did exactly that, walking away from his NBA player option to join Japan’s B.League (Chiba Jets). Ric Bucher and Greg Stolt break down the real reasons: the grind of “NBA glamour,” the pull of stability and stardom at home, and the B.League’s rapid evolution from corporate teams to a modern pro league — including the looming salary-cap era (and why Watanabe’s timing may be the smartest move of all).

    Then the conversation goes deeper: Japan’s OG trailblazer Yuta Tabuse (and why his path might’ve hit differently in today’s NBA), the “marketing tool” narrative attached to Asian players, and the unresolved tension around Rui Hachimura and Japan men’s national team coach Tom Hovasse at a critical moment for qualification.


    Timestamps / Chapters
    • 00:00:11 Pacific Rims intro: Asia hoops, pro + college + national teams
    • 00:01:00 “We were too China-heavy” → shifting focus to Japan’s B.League
    • 00:01:39 The shocker: Yuta Watanabe opts out of the NBA to return to Japan
    • 00:03:40 Why “NBA caliber” players leave anyway: role vs. freedom, stability, joy
    • 00:07:33 Giving flowers to Yuta Tabuse: the original grind story
    • 00:12:04 Greg’s first Japan game: “Packed for Tabuse… then half-full without him”
    • 00:16:40 How Japan’s league transformed: corporate model → pro structure (FIBA pressure)
    • 00:20:44 Money talk: what Watanabe gave up + why B.League timing matters (cap coming)
    • 00:24:15 “Asian player = marketing tool?” Reality check (and why roster spots are too valuable)
    • 00:29:55 Japan national team tension: Rui Hachimura vs. Tom Hovasse — what happens next?
    • 00:36:55 Tease: the media’s role in shaping basketball perception across Asia
    • 00:40:19 Outro + call to rate/review + hit the show on IG/X


    #PacificRims #RicBucher #GregStolt #YutaWatanabe #BLeague #JapanBasketball #ChibaJets #NBAGlobal #AsianBasketball #RuiHachimura #TomHovasse #FIBA #BasketballPodcast #InternationalBasketball #UnitedWeCast

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • Yao Ming Was the “Gateway”… So Why Didn’t China Produce the Next NBA Wave? | Pacific Rims (Ric Bucher + Greg Stolt)
    Jan 23 2026

    China had the population, the passion, and the Yao Ming moment—so why didn’t the “funnel” to the NBA ever truly open? In this introductory episode of Pacific Rims, NBA analyst and Yao Ming biographer Ric Bucher and former overseas pro / former NBA China executive Greg Stolt trade first-hand stories from the early days of the CBA to the league’s modern, professional era—then dig into the toughest question: why Asia still hasn’t produced NBA-caliber guards at scale.

    Ric shares what he saw the first time he scouted Yao in Shanghai (and the cultural shock of Yao’s fame back home), while Greg explains how China’s basketball ecosystem matured fast—foreign coaches, global connections, and higher-level imports—but still faces major barriers in development, language, and consistent elite competition. They also spotlight Joe Tsai’s scholarship pipeline and the emerging Asian University Basketball League (AUBL)—a potential bridge between high school hype and pro basketball across the Pacific Rim.


    📺 Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@UnitedWeCast

    Time Stamps
    • 00:00:11 — What Pacific Rims covers: China, Korea, Japan, Australia & beyond
    • 00:01:10 — Why this is an “intro” stretch + global guest plan
    • 00:01:47 — Ric’s Yao Ming origin story: Shanghai Sharks scouting + first impressions
    • 00:04:33 — Yao’s celebrity in China: airports, hotels, stampedes (no crowd control)
    • 00:06:14 — The promise that didn’t happen: why the “next Chinese NBA wave” never arrived
    • 00:08:02 — Greg’s “walk in like you belong” CBA era → today’s security/pro evolution
    • 00:10:05 — Training culture, sports science, and the delicate “outside influence” dance
    • 00:15:37 — The biggest barrier for foreign coaches in China: language + trust in interpreters
    • 00:20:42 — The guard problem: why Asia produces bigs more than point guards
    • 00:21:52 — NBA Academy lessons: exposure, English, and why elite reps come “too late”
    • 00:33:39 — Evaluating Yang Hansen: stretch-5 skills vs modern NBA athletic demands
    • 00:40:12 — Joe Tsai scholarship program: how it works + who it’s producing
    • 00:44:18 — AUBL explained: filling Asia’s “empty college basketball space” + 2026–27 launch plan
    • 00:47:05 — Next stop: Japan + the broader Pacific Rim pipeline

    #PacificRims #RicBucher #GregStolt #YaoMing #CBA #ChinaBasketball #AsianBasketball #NBAGlobal #NBADraft #BasketballDevelopment #PointGuardPlay #NBAAcademy #JoeTsai #AUBL #InternationalHoops #HoopsCulture #UnitedWeCast

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    48 mins