On The Ball with Ric Bucher

Ric Bucher, NBA insider and Fox Sports NBA analyst

A weekly sports podcast with inside information and one-of-a-kind perspective on the hottest topics and behind-the-scenes happenings from veteran NBA insider, author and TV analyst Ric Bucher. Find all his work at RicBucher.com. Support this show at http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. 4 DAYS AGO

    NBA Playoffs Expose the Truth: Ric Bucher on Celtics Collapse, Anthony Edwards’ Maturity, Wemby’s Rise & Why the Lakers Are Done

    Ric Bucher breaks down why the NBA playoffs are basketball’s ultimate truth serum — exposing flaws, habits, maturity and roster weaknesses that the regular season can hide. Ric dives deep into the shocking Celtics collapse against the 76ers, why Joe Mazzulla actually overachieved with Boston’s roster, and how Philadelphia finally found the formula to weaponize Joel Embiid, Paul George and Tyrese Maxey. Ric also examines Cade Cunningham’s playoff emergence, Anthony Edwards’ lingering maturity issues, Victor Wembanyama’s extraordinary composure, and why the Spurs-Timberwolves series may come down to discipline versus size. Plus: why Luka Doncic is almost certainly done for the postseason and why the Lakers’ hopes against the Thunder are finished regardless. Time Stamps: 00:00 Intro + Ric’s new book “Coachable” 01:41 Why playoff basketball reveals the truth about teams 03:29 Celtics collapse: why Joe Mazzulla is NOT to blame 04:45 Boston’s overachieving roster explained 08:00 Cade Cunningham’s playoff leap and postseason realities 09:40 How Paul George neutralized Jaylen Brown 11:14 Boston’s dangerous addiction to 3-point shooting 12:45 Why Embiid and Paul George finally worked together 15:13 Celtics center rotation confusion: Garza, Vucevic & Kata 16:15 Why playoff trash talk matters 17:05 Knicks vs. Sixers matchup problems 19:20 Karl-Anthony Towns’ smartest basketball yet 21:55 Spurs vs. Timberwolves: size vs. discipline 24:35 Wembanyama’s response after Game 1 struggles 25:08 Anthony Edwards and Minnesota’s maturity problem 27:15 Wemby’s professionalism vs. Embiid’s defensiveness 29:50 Ant’s late-game mistakes and accountability 31:55 Why Ric still trusts San Antonio over Minnesota 32:30 Luka Doncic’s injury timeline means Lakers are finished 34:35 Cavaliers-Pistons and Evan Mobley questions 36:20 Cade Cunningham is still the best player in the series 37:45 Closing thoughts Hashtags: #NBAPlayoffs #Celtics #76ers #JoelEmbiid #PaulGeorge #JaysonTatum #JaylenBrown #CadeCunningham #VictorWembanyama #AnthonyEdwards #LukaDoncic #Lakers #Timberwolves #Spurs #RicBucher #OnTheBall #UnitedWeCast Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    38 min
  2. 30 APR

    NBA Playoff Chaos, LeBron-Bronny Hype & the Ring Culture Problem

    Ric Bucher breaks down a dizzying NBA playoff picture, from the Thunder and Spurs looking like rising Western powers to the Trail Blazers once again appearing trapped behind better-timed contenders. Ric also explains why building around international stars such as Giannis Antetokounmpo may be the safest path for NBA franchises in today’s trade-demand era. Then Ric digs into why ring culture has warped how we judge stars like Chris Paul, Russell Westbrook, James Harden and Joel Embiid before turning to the Magic-Pistons series, Jalen Duren’s sudden passivity, Paolo Banchero’s aggression and Cade Cunningham’s massive playoff workload. Finally, Ric takes on the LeBron James-Bronny James playoff moment, arguing that while it may be meaningful to the James family, the public celebration ignores how power, access and nepotism shaped the opportunity. Time Stamps: 00:00 Intro + Ric’s new book on coachability 02:00 NBA playoff picture feels upside down 02:23 Thunder, Spurs, Blazers and bad timing in the West 03:23 Giannis-to-Portland rumors and international-star loyalty 04:46 Why NBA teams should build around foreign stars 05:38 Ring culture and how we underrate Chris Paul, Westbrook, Harden and Embiid 07:20 Playoff vertigo: Hawks-Knicks, Sixers-Celtics, Magic-Pistons 08:02 Why Magic-Pistons is not a “historic upset” 09:31 Jalen Duren’s playoff struggles vs. Orlando 11:28 How Paolo Banchero is changing the series 13:53 Is Duren a true No. 2 on a contender? 15:36 LeBron and Bronny’s “historic” playoff moment 18:57 Why Bronny’s Lakers role is not like Ken Griffey Jr. and Sr. 20:36 Nepotism, power and Kirk Lacob’s Warriors path 23:24 Why Bronny hype went too far after Game 3 25:44 Closing Hashtags: #NBAPlayoffs #LeBronJames #BronnyJames #GiannisAntetokounmpo #JalenDuren #PaoloBanchero #CadeCunningham #OrlandoMagic #DetroitPistons #TrailBlazers #Thunder #Spurs #OnTheBall #RicBucher #UnitedWeCast Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    26 min
  3. 23 APR

    Why Cooper Flagg Should Win Rookie of the Year, Why NBA Threads Gets It Wrong, and Why Steve Kerr Deserves More Respect

    In this episode of On The Ball with Ric Bucher, Ric takes aim at what he sees as a flawed NBA Rookie of the Year narrative, explaining why Cooper Flagg’s all-around burden and production for the Dallas Mavericks should outweigh the case for Kon Knueppel and Charlotte’s improved record. He then connects that debate to one of the most controversial award decisions in league history: LeBron James vs. Carmelo Anthony for Rookie of the Year in 2004, exposing how inconsistent voter logic can be from era to era. Ric also dives into the state of NBA discourse on Threads and social media, using the lazy Stephen Curry vs. Magic Johnson argument as an example of how nuance and historical context are disappearing from basketball conversations. He explains why greatness does not need false comparisons to be appreciated. Finally, Ric delivers a forceful defense of Steve Kerr, arguing that the Golden State Warriors head coach did far more than ride the coattails of Steph Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green. From player development to championship adaptability, Ric breaks down why Kerr’s coaching résumé is stronger than many fans want to admit — and why Warriors fans may soon learn exactly what he meant to the franchise. Time Stamps: 00:00 Intro, Coachable book update and where to follow Ric 03:00 Why Cooper Flagg should beat Kon Knueppel for NBA Rookie of the Year 08:00 The LeBron James vs. Carmelo Anthony Rookie of the Year parallel 13:15 Why NBA Threads has become a bad place for smart basketball discussion 16:30 Stephen Curry vs. Magic Johnson — why the comparison misses the point 21:00 Ric’s defense of Steve Kerr and why Warriors fans underrate him 27:45 Why Kerr’s 2022 title may be his best coaching job Hashtags: #NBA #OnTheBall #RicBucher #CooperFlagg #KonKnueppel #RookieOfTheYear #DallasMavericks #CharlotteHornets #LeBronJames #CarmeloAnthony #StephenCurry #MagicJohnson #SteveKerr #GoldenStateWarriors #NBAPodcast Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    31 min
  4. 16 APR

    LaMelo Crossed the Line, and Kobe Is Being Erased? Ric Bucher on the NBA’s Replay Failure and the False Revision of Bryant’s Legacy

    In this episode of On The Ball with Ric Bucher, Ric takes aim at two issues he believes reveal everything wrong with today’s NBA conversation. First, he breaks down the Charlotte Hornets’ controversial overtime win over the Miami Heat and why LaMelo Ball’s takedown of Bam Adebayo should have led to an ejection, not a postgame review. Ric explains why the NBA’s obsession with protocol over fairness continues to fail players, teams and fans in the biggest moments. Then he turns to what he sees as an even more troubling trend: the growing effort to downgrade Kobe Bryant’s greatness through lazy comparisons, out-of-context stats and revisionist hot takes. Ric dismantles the idea that Dwyane Wade was on Kobe’s level, explains why numbers alone cannot define greatness, and revisits Kobe’s unforgettable Game 7 performance against the Celtics to show why box scores can never capture will, command and championship impact. This is a sharp, unfiltered episode on NBA officiating, LaMelo Ball, Bam Adebayo, Kobe Bryant, Dwyane Wade, NBA media narratives, instant replay, playoff basketball, Lakers-Celtics history and why the modern obsession with stats is distorting how greatness is remembered. Time Stamps: 0:00 Intro 1:58 Hornets-Heat controversy and why LaMelo Ball should have been ejected 4:06 The NBA’s fatal flaw: protocol over fairness 7:49 Why Ric says LaMelo’s explanation made it worse 12:40 Why the league’s review comes too late 13:21 Why the posthumous downgrading of Kobe Bryant has gone too far 14:27 Ric reacts to the Dwyane Wade vs. Kobe Bryant comparison 16:49 The stat that exposes the gap between Kobe and Wade 18:03 Why today’s NBA discourse is being warped by box scores and clips 20:33 Kobe’s Game 7 vs. Boston and the greatness stats can’t measure 24:36 Outro Hashtags: #OnTheBall #RicBucher #NBA #LaMeloBall #BamAdebayo #CharlotteHornets #MiamiHeat #KobeBryant #DwyaneWade #Lakers #Celtics #NBAPlayoffs #NBARules #InstantReplay #BasketballPodcast Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    25 min
  5. 9 APR

    Has American Basketball Lost Its Edge? Why the NBA’s Best Players Aren’t American Anymore | On The Ball with Ric Bucher

    Has the NBA quietly stopped being an American-dominated league? In this episode of On The Ball with Ric Bucher, Ric dives into a provocative question that cuts to the heart of modern basketball: why are the league’s most dominant, most disciplined and most impactful stars now coming from everywhere but the United States? From Dirk Nowitzki breaking the Heatles, to Luka Doncic humiliating Phoenix, to Nikola Jokic, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Victor Wembanyama owning the NBA spotlight, Ric argues this is more than a talent shift — it’s a culture shift. He examines how AAU basketball, NIL money, social-media highlight culture and a growing focus on individual branding may be undermining the development of American stars, while international players continue to arrive better schooled in team concepts, fundamentals, humility and winning basketball. Ric also breaks down why Anthony Edwards still isn’t the answer as America’s next NBA alpha, what the Thunder, Nuggets, Spurs and Lakers recently revealed about the league’s true power structure, and why the NBA is no longer an American league so much as a league based in America. This is a sharp, uncomfortable and must-hear conversation about where the game is headed — and what U.S. basketball needs to learn before it falls even farther behind. Time Stamps: 0:00 Intro, Ric’s new book The Value of Being Coachable and where to follow him 2:00 Why Ric believes the NBA has changed in a profound way 3:07 Are international stars making American players look entitled and overrated? 4:24 Dirk, Luka and Jokic as symbols of a basketball power shift 6:04 Why this change should bother American basketball fans 8:18 How money, NIL and social media may be warping U.S. player development 10:18 The deeper cultural problem behind America’s basketball slide 12:17 Why the NBA is no longer truly an American league 13:52 Lakers-Thunder and Spurs-Nuggets as proof of who really runs today’s NBA 15:14 Which young American players can still thrive internationally 15:31 Why Anthony Edwards may not be the next American face of the league 18:03 AAU basketball, bad habits and why overseas development now has the edge 19:28 What the 2024 Olympics revealed about Ant’s limitations in FIBA play 20:19 Why Jalen Brown still isn’t central to the MVP conversation 21:11 What Jokic vs. Wemby really showed beyond the star matchup 23:32 How media, politics and athlete messaging complicate today’s NBA culture 26:14 Why international stars still seem more grateful for the NBA opportunity 27:43 How media coverage has helped fuel the problem 30:03 Why Jokic, Wemby, Luka and Shai check more boxes than any American star 31:09 Ric’s final verdict: America may need to import a new basketball mindset #OnTheBall #RicBucher #NBA #NikolaJokic #LukaDoncic #VictorWembanyama #ShaiGilgeousAlexander #AnthonyEdwards #TeamUSA #Basketball #NBAPodcast #UnitedWeCast Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    32 min
  6. 2 APR

    Breaking Down the NBA MVP Race Chaos — and Why Billy Donovan to UNC Makes No Sense

    With the NBA regular season winding down, Ric Bucher dives into the most complicated MVP ballot he can remember — and explains why this year’s race is far messier than a simple Shai Gilgeous-Alexander vs. Nikola Jokic debate. Ric makes the case for why voters are facing a legitimate five-name traffic jam, with Victor Wembanyama, Jaylen Brown, Cade Cunningham and Luka Doncic all forcing their way into the conversation. He also explains why the NBA’s 65-game minimum is doing exactly what it was supposed to do. Then Ric shifts to college basketball and the speculation connecting Chicago Bulls head coach Billy Donovan to North Carolina. Ric explains why that rumored move says more about the Bulls’ future than Donovan’s — and why returning to college coaching in the NIL-transfer portal era is nowhere near as attractive as it used to be. Also: Ric previews why the Lakers may be more dangerous than critics want to admit as the postseason approaches. Time Stamps: 0:00 Intro, Ric’s new book The Secret to Being Coachable and where to find all United WeCast shows 2:00 New Air Club sponsorship mention 3:05 Why this year’s MVP ballot is a nightmare for voters 4:13 Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s case gets even stronger 5:05 Nikola Jokic’s historic statistical argument 6:09 Why the 65-game minimum is working 7:28 Victor Wembanyama’s MVP-worthy impact and future as the face of the league 9:46 Jaylen Brown’s surprising MVP ballot case 12:37 Cade Cunningham’s late push into the race 14:03 Luka Doncic and the Lakers’ surge complicate everything 15:50 Why Billy Donovan to North Carolina doesn’t add up 19:41 How NIL and the transfer portal changed college coaching forever 22:40 Why old-school blue blood advantages no longer guarantee success 23:24 Outro and why the Lakers may be tougher than expected in the playoffs Hashtags: #OnTheBall #RicBucher #NBA #MVP #ShaiGilgeousAlexander #NikolaJokic #VictorWembanyama #LukaDoncic #JaylenBrown #CadeCunningham #Lakers #BillyDonovan #NorthCarolina #CollegeBasketball #UnitedWeCast Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    25 min
  7. 26 MAR

    March Madness’s Most Insulting Tradition? Ric Bucher Says Coaches Have Lost the Plot

    On this episode of On The Ball with Ric Bucher, Ric briefly touches on LeBron James, the Lakers’ playoff positioning, Cade Cunningham’s award eligibility, and the chaos brewing in the final stretch of the NBA season — but then takes a hard turn into a bigger issue exposed by March Madness. Ric argues that one of college basketball’s most celebrated traditions — emptying the bench in the final seconds of a blowout — is not a heartwarming gesture at all. In his view, it can be performative, demeaning, and completely disconnected from what real competitors actually want. Drawing on his own playing experience, the example of Dean Smith, conversations with current athletes, and the firsthand experience of watching his daughter play in the NCAA Tournament, Ric explains why token late-game appearances can feel more like humiliation than reward. This is a sharp, deeply personal episode about coaching, competition, respect, and the life lessons sports are supposed to teach — the same themes at the heart of Ric’s upcoming book, Coachable: The Secret to How Legendary Performers Reach Their Highest Potential. Condensed Time Stamps 0:00 Intro, Ric’s new book Coachable, United WeCast plugs, and New Air Club 2:46 LeBron’s loose-ball dive, Lakers chemistry, and why one moment proves nothing 4:42 Lakers playoff seeding, Rockets vs. Timberwolves, and why size still matters 6:53 Cade Cunningham, awards eligibility, and Ric’s broader mission in sports coverage 9:18 The real lessons sports are supposed to teach 9:48 March Madness outrage, coaching clips, and why social media lacks context 11:46 Why Brenda Frese’s fiery exchange was not “controversial” 12:50 Ric’s real target: the empty-the-bench ritual in NCAA blowouts 14:01 Ric’s daughter’s March Madness experience with Cal Baptist vs. UCLA 16:02 Why token appearances can feel insulting, not rewarding 17:03 Dean Smith’s original approach vs. today’s hollow substitution theater 18:13 Why gradual reserve minutes are better for development and respect 20:32 The “don’t treat me like a Make-A-Wish kid” story 22:15 Why players don’t see garbage-time cameos as meaningful participation 25:16 What college coaches should do instead 27:20 Ric checks with current athletes — and they agree 28:19 Outro and what’s next on On The Ball Hashtags #OnTheBall #RicBucher #MarchMadness #NCAATournament #CollegeBasketball #WomensBasketball #BasketballPodcast #SportsMedia #Coaching #SportsCulture #LeBronJames #Lakers #NBA #CadeCunningham #UnitedWeCast Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    29 min
  8. 19 MAR

    The NBA Whistle Ric Wants Abolished — And Why Lu Dort Isn’t the Real Problem

    On this episode of On The Ball with Ric Bucher, Ric dives into two things he’d love to see abolished from today’s NBA: the whistle-hunting blocking foul and the blind loyalty that turns every fan debate into tribal warfare. Ric opens by saluting the WNBA players’ new CBA breakthrough, explaining why tying salaries to gross revenue instead of net revenue could be a game-changing template for all pro athletes. From there, he pulls back the curtain on how NBA officiating really works, drawing on his own experience trying out as an original D-League referee and explaining why fans who scream “just follow the rule book” don’t understand how much of basketball officiating is built on interpretation. Then Ric zeroes in on one of the most frustrating calls in today’s game: the offensive player who barrels into a defender, flails, and gets rewarded with free throws. He argues it’s not basketball — it’s a trick. He also takes on the growing outrage culture around physical defenders like Lu Dort and Draymond Green, making the case that there’s a huge difference between playing with an edge and crossing the line. Finally, Ric tackles the bigger issue underneath it all: fan tribalism, media hypocrisy, and the death of nuance. Why do fans defend behavior from their own stars that they’d condemn from anyone else? Why has “you’re a hater” become the laziest argument in sports? And what does all of this say about the NBA, its media ecosystem, and us? This is a classic Ric Bucher deep dive — smart, pointed, and unafraid to challenge the league, the players, the media, and the fans. Timestamps: 00:00 Intro, sponsor mention, and Ric’s new book on coachability 02:44 Why the WNBA’s new CBA is a major win for players 04:24 The two things Ric wants abolished from today’s NBA 05:16 Why NBA officiating is far harder than fans think 06:51 How the NBA tells referees how to call games 09:07 Traveling, the gather step, and why the league wants more scoring 11:32 The whistle Ric hates most: fake blocking fouls on drives 15:14 Jaylen Brown, whistle-hunting, and why players feel forced to exploit it 15:49 The other thing Ric wants gone: blind loyalty from fans and media 16:00 Lu Dort, Nikola Jokic, and “strategically reckless” defense 17:15 Why the 65-game award rule is doing exactly what it was meant to do 18:01 Ric’s issue with teams discouraging players from playing 19:31 Why smaller defenders get away with more physical tactics 20:37 Thunder fans booing Jokic — and the danger of tribal fandom 22:06 Draymond Green, Lu Dort, and where edge crosses into excess 24:53 Why players shouldn’t be labeled “dirty” so casually 25:19 Hard fouls, self-policing, and what the NBA gets wrong 26:03 Why sports and society are both drowning in performative loyalty 27:00 The media’s role in selling outrage and false authority 28:13 Principles over fandom: Ric’s case for nuance 30:17 Final thoughts — and a Lakers topic looming for next episode #OnTheBall #RicBucher #NBA #NikolaJokic #LuDort #DraymondGreen #NBARules #NBAOfficiating #WNBA #Basketball Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    32 min

Hosts & Guests

4.6
out of 5
17 Ratings

About

A weekly sports podcast with inside information and one-of-a-kind perspective on the hottest topics and behind-the-scenes happenings from veteran NBA insider, author and TV analyst Ric Bucher. Find all his work at RicBucher.com. Support this show at http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bucher-and-friends. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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