
Zion Suzuki’s World Cup display for Japan drew plenty of attention, though not all of it was focused on his goalkeeping.
As Japan played out a 2-2 draw with the Netherlands, some basketball fans tuning into the match joked that Rui Hachimura had suddenly taken up a new position between the posts.
The comparison spread quickly online, but it also highlighted why Suzuki should be recognized in his own right.
NBA fans confuse Zion Suzuki with Rui Hachimura
The talk started after an NBA fan supporting the Lakers posted during the match, saying Suzuki looked like the Lakers’ forward.
“I thought that Japan had Rui in goal for a second”
Suzuki had more to show than just a passing resemblance. The 23-year-old Parma goalkeeper started Japan’s Group F opener at AT&T Stadium and helped the Samurai Blue earn a point thanks to Daichi Kamada’s late equalizer.
His journey has been impressive. Suzuki was born in Newark, New Jersey, to a Ghanaian father and a Japanese mother before moving to Japan as a child. He developed through the Urawa Red Diamonds system and later played for Sint-Truiden and Parma.

Hachimura’s path has been different. Born in Toyama, Japan, to a Beninese father and Japanese mother, he starred at Gonzaga University before being drafted into the NBA, where he became one of Japan’s most recognizable athletes.
NBA fans react to Japan goalkeeper comparison
Social media had plenty to say about the comparison. One fan noticed the name overlap, too. “Looks like Rui, name is Zion… What a coincidence”
Another commented that some fans were already assuming a family connection. “Yeah, many people thought he was Rui’s brother, too, man.”
There were Lakers jokes as well, with one user posting: “The Lakers didn’t re-sign him. So he is now the goalie,”
But not everyone agreed with the comparison. One fan responded: “This looks nothing like Rui,”
That pushback matters. Lookalike jokes are common in sports, but when a joke crosses into treating two mixed-race Japanese athletes as interchangeable, that casual racism should be strongly frowned upon.
Suzuki and Hachimura have distinct personalities, backgrounds, and careers. Both are proud representatives of Japan’s multicultural identity, and both deserve recognition for their achievements in their respective sports.
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