Advertisement
NBA
SportBasketball

Bust-up between LA Lakers star Hachimura, coach threatens ambitious Japan’s hoop dreams

Success anything but slam dunk as row threatens to derail domestic league’s progress

3-MIN READ3-MIN
Los Angeles Lakers’ Rui Hachimura dunks the ball during an NBA play-offs  game against the Minnesota Timberwolves. Photo: EPA-EFE
Agence France-Presse

Japan has ambitious plans to become a basketball powerhouse but a row involving star player Rui Hachimura and disagreements over the domestic league’s direction mean success is anything but a slam dunk.

Once a minnow on the world stage, Japan qualified for last year’s Paris Olympics and took eventual silver medallists France to overtime in the group phase, helped by a handful of NBA-based players including Los Angeles Lakers forward Hachimura.

At home, the domestic B League is enjoying record attendances and revenue, with new arenas being built and ambitions to become the second-best league in the world behind the NBA.

Advertisement

Chairman Shinji Shimada says the B. League’s “mix of sport and live entertainment” offers Japanese fans something different.

“Lots of people watch a B. League game for the first time and say it’s more interesting than football or baseball, and they want to come back,” he told AFP in the B League’s plush office in central Tokyo.

Chiba Jets’ Yuta Watanabe walks across the court after his side’s B League game against Sendai 89ers. Photo: AFP
Chiba Jets’ Yuta Watanabe walks across the court after his side’s B League game against Sendai 89ers. Photo: AFP

Shimada said the B League was already catching up on a business scale with leagues in Europe and China, and was taking steps to close the gap on the court too.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x