To Don,
You say:
"We only get to see the elite Japanese players, and they leave a skewed view. If we go to Japan we'll probably find just as many cocky, flashy, and impatient players bubbling beneath the elite. And they are more popular than the Justin counterparts."
It'd seem that it's precisely a matter of point of view. It may be completely reversed in Japan, especially more when taking into account the negative bias against gaijin people, and the spirit and nostalgia of pre-WW2 memories. You'll probably find japanese players, who has a parent that's either American or Chinese. And then the problem would probably be the same over there.
Let's take an extreme. In football (soccer for others), I've seen behaviours which left me speachless. Nazi wannabes will like to say that their "******" has scored a goal for their national team, so, huh, somehow they like him, but there's too much of those "niggers" in their team, and it would be better if there were more white people. You got all sorts of clichés associated to skin-coloured people, sometimes related to their skills regarding their sport activity, sometimes not.
Depending on the point of view, who's opposed to who, and regarding the context, an individual can be soullessly shifted from one side to the other.
Though fortunately, this extreme is not reached in video game communities (as far as I can tell, but I'm certainly not all knowing), like in so many communities, there's still an influence of some sort, something that still remains, an unpleasing feeling you won't be able to shrug off.
However, I'm certainly not putting everybody in the same basket, and I'm not claiming that it's generalized to all gaming groups, nor applying to every individual in those groups.
It's always down a core of individuals whose standards seem to change depending on their beliefs and needs. More or less, labelling becomes extremely convenient.
Somehow, a question would have been why would have video game competitions been spared that phenomenom? It's still about humans fighting other humans.