Worldwide baseball fans are scratching their heads over the looks of the pairs of official uniforms worn this weekend in the 2026 World Baseball Classic after Japan's standout Mizuno kit drew high praise and also blistering criticism of the remainder of the tourney duds. But what was billed to be a collective visual party in the name of baseball around the world has become an online contest of originality, craft, and the heart of a nation's dignity.
Most of the other nations competing will sport identically made Nike jerseys,s but Japan's national team has been given special allowance to use its long-time supplier, Mizuno. The two approaches have left many supporters wondering why a particular nation got custom treatment while others are left with a standard look. Some of this difference has led to allegations that tournament organizers chose expedience over character.
Why Japan’s uniform design has impressed fans
Samurai Japan, as Japan's national team is known, is impressed with its uniform for the 2026 World Baseball Classic months in advance. Featuring nods to Japanese baseball heritage in the design, the piece also sports elegant lettering and a collar and sleeves that showcase bold craftsmanship with mixed details.
It feels bespoke, and looks bespoke, even if the only truly bespoke aspect of the shirt is the team, and its history that it embodies, rather than a mass-produced template.
Japanese firm Mizuno, who have a long history in the sport, has been responsible for Japan's baseball uniforms for decades. Since this long-lasting relationship, the nation has maintained an unmistakable character in the global competition. Supporters say the new shirt carries on that tradition by combining contemporary design with aspects of culture.
Compared to most other nations, whose uniforms are essentially a Nike template with minor variations. Many jerseys, the fonts, layouts, and color blocking are so similar that they look like one another, while they are rival nations separated by mountains, oceans, and other countries. Proponents believe that this level of a one-size-fits-all process takes out the uniqueness of the World Baseball Classic.
Social media criticism grows louder
Fans quickly took to Twitter to express their disappointment after images of the different national jerseys started appearing online. Numerous people accused the tournament organizers and Nike of having done a halfhearted job with the designs, calling them drab, commonplace, and uninspired. The comparisons with Japan's kit only fueled the backlash further.
Fans of baseball noted that the point of these international tournaments is to embrace different cultures, not stamp every country down to the same aesthetic. Some fans from Latin American and European nations complained that the new kits didn't adequately represent their national colors or customs.