The league happens to be in Japan. They are allowed two foreign (almost always American) players, typically a quarterback and one skill player, and have some American coaches. I had an opportunity to go coach over there a couple of years ago but couldn't make it work with my two Rottweilers. I also know someone who played there after he graduated from Utah.
As far as scouting kickers from there, I think it's just a matter of time before someone signs in the NFL, or plays at a major college. Look at Australia, they have a whole program (
https://www.prokickaustralia.com/) dedicated to finding kickers & punters. They currently have 75 kids who have gone to college or the NFL, including 5 Ray Guy award winners and 17 All-Americans. I wrote about this program as part of my thesis at Michigan State (Go Sparty!) on alternative ways of finding and developing talent for American football.
Kicking is such an individual aspect of football that I don't worry about LOC (level of competition) in a lesser, still-developing league. If you can kick, you can kick. It's not like watching a RB dominate in that league since most of the defenders are smaller, slower, and less familiar with football.
When I was coaching, we tried to bring in International players, a Japanese kicker, some German offensive linemen (all 6'5" and 300 lbs), but international students have to prove they can afford to be here (some weird rule like showing they have $10k in savings), and at the junior college level, we don't get a lot of kids who have those types of financial resources.
Gill Brandt was famous for looking outside the box to find football talent and it's what first inspired me to be passionate about identifying and developing football talent years ago. What
@Furboy is suggesting here is more of that and has nothing to do with ethnicity/race.