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Now reading: Chapter 157 157: City Meet Championship (6) from 2K BASKETBALL SYSTEM, a Action novel by namelessmonster.

The harsh buzz of the break-ti horn cut through the arena's noise. The scoreboard was a stark, luminous reminder: Trece Martires 52, Dasmariñas 45. Ten minutes remained. An eternity and no ti at all. In the tight huddle, the air was electric, thick with the scent of linint and the silent promise whispered between ragged breaths. This quarter belonged to heart, grit, and those monts that define legends.

Coach Gutierrez knelt, his voice a low, urgent hum. "We're in this. Seven points is two possessions and a stop. Forget the score. Forget the crowd. Play every second like it's the last you'll ever get. Tristan," he said, locking eyes with his point guard, "the team looks to you. Lead them ho."

As Tristan, Marco, Aiden, Gab, and Ian stepped onto the glossy hardwood, the stirrings of expectation in the stands swelled into a rising storm.

But sothing in Tristan's eyes was different. The doubt, the weight of the ga, was gone. In its place was a fierce, unnerving calm—a laser-focus, as if his entire being had centered on a singular, burning fla.

Marco, wiping sweat from his brow, glanced at him and nudged Gab.

Marco: "Woah. Look at his eyes. I don't know what the coach told him, but that's a different look."

Gab (quietly): "He's not just looking. He's seeing. He's in the zone. Get him the ball and get out of the way."

The whistle blew. The ball was inbounded by Ian towards to Tristan. Possession: Dasmariñas.

Tristan caught it, and for the first ti all ga, he did not hesitate. His mind went silent; his body moved with a graceful, predatory certainty. There was no thought of setting up a play or finding the open man. There was only the ball, the rim, and the path between them.

He drove hard to the right, a blur of green and white. A defender slid over to cut him off, but Tristan spun, a whirlwind of motion, leaving the player grasping at air. He sliced through the paint and released a soft finger-roll that seed to glide through the net without resistance.

Score: 52–47

No celebration. Just a low growl of determination as he sprinted back on defense. Trece Martires, startled by the sudden aggression, rushed a shot. It missed. Ian secured the rebound and imdiately looked for his point guard.

Tristan took the outlet pass, and instead of slowing to set up the offense, he accelerated. Every dribble was a calculated, rhythmic dance. He pulled up just beyond the three-point arc, cocked the ball back, and fired. The shot was pure confidence. It kissed the back of the rim, seed to hesitate for a heartbeat, and dropped through the net as slow as slow could be.

The Dasmariñas crowd erupted. The montum had shifted, instantly and violently.

Tristan beca a force of nature, an engine of well-oiled instinct:

He crossed over so hard his defender stumbled, then elevated for a smooth, unstoppable floater in the lane.

He caught a pass curling off a screen from Ian, took one dribble to his left to create space, and drained a cold-blooded three with a hand right in his face.

He read Tracy Roo's eyes, darting into the passing lane to steal the ball. He sprinted the length of the court, two defenders chasing him, and finished with a thunderous, acrobatic reverse layup that made the backboard shudder.

Each basket sent tidal waves of energy through his teammates and the fans. Doubt was being washed away.

Marco (to Gab during a free throw): "It's like watching a man possessed. He's not even thinking."

Gab (shaking his head in awe): "No, it's pure focus. He's not just playing the ga; he is the ga right now."

The energy was contagious. Inspired, Ian Veneracion t Ibeke Matumba at the summit, rising to emphatically block his layup attempt, drawing a collective gasp from the entire gym. Aiden Robinson transford into a demon on the glass, fighting for every loose ball and securing rebounds with a renewed fire. Marco, freed from the pressure, began taking confident shots again, his swagger returning.

On the Trece Martires bench, chaos was brewing. Tracy Roo shook his head, frustration darkening his eyes as he looked at his coach.

Tracy (to his teammates): "What are we doing?! We've lost our rhythm. Everyone, collapse on him! Make soone else beat us. Stop Tristan!"

But even the double-teams failed. Tristan would simply split them or pass to a now-open teammate who, buoyed by his leader's fire, would not miss.

During a brief tiout with 4:30 left, Aiden grabbed Tristan by the jersey, his eyes wide.

Aiden: "Tris, where did this co from? You're an animal. You're unstoppable."

Tristan managed a small, breathless smile, beads of sweat dripping from his chin.

Tristan: "When it's all on the line, the world falls away. There's only the court. This is us. This is our dream."

The ga resud. Dasmariñas led by one. Tristan brought the ball up, directed traffic with a glance, then went to work. A rapid crossover, left-right, that froze his defender. He rose for a deadly pull-up jumper that swished through the net.

Score: Dasmariñas 56 — Trece Martires 54

Trece Martires, desperate, pushed back. Matumba bulldozed inside for a contested basket and a foul, completing the three-point play.

Score: 56–57

With 1:30 left, an electric tension seized the gym. Every person was on their feet. Tristan dribbled at the top of the key, his eyes locked on the basket, the clock his only opponent. Trece Martires sent a second defender, then a third. They sward him, a desperate cage of arms and bodies.

It didn't matter. In one fluid, impossible motion, Tristan leaped backwards, fading away from the basket and the defenders, launching a high-arcing three-pointer that seed to hang in the air forever. Silence. Then, swish. Nothing but net.

Score: Dasmariñas 59 — Trece Martires 57

Trece Martires surged down the court. Tracy Roo drove, looking to kick it out to Jace Yap, but Gab read the play, his hands a blur as he intercepted the pass. He got the ball to Ian, who imdiately found Tristan. Tristan pushed the ball, called off a screen, rolled left, and with ice in his veins, sank a smooth mid-range jumper.

Score: Dasmariñas 61 — Trece Martires 57

Fifteen seconds left. Last chance. Jace Yap launched a desperate, prayer of a three-pointer. It rimd out. The ball bounced high off the iron. Ian crashed the boards, snatching the rebound out of the air with both hands just as the final buzzer howled.

The gym exploded. The bench cleared, dogpiling Tristan at mid-court. Players collapsed, embraced, and roared in triumph, the sound a mix of joy, relief, and pure disbelief. Coach Gutierrez stood at the sideline, a wide, proud smile spreading across his face.

Coach: "You fought! You believed! You are Champions!"

Amidst the chaos, Tristan found himself clutching the gleaming championship trophy, his heart a wild drum against his ribs. He pressed his forehead against the cool tal.

Tristan (whispering): "For the city… for the team… for us."

(Post-Ga Interview)

The celebration on the court was a swirling vortex of confetti, caras, and joyous shouts. A reporter from a local sports network, microphone in hand, navigated the jubilant crowd and approached Tristan.

Reporter: "Tristan! Tristan Herrera! An absolutely unbelievable performance. The city is going wild! Take us back to the start of the fourth quarter. You were down by seven. What happened out there? What switched on for you?"

Tristan, drenched in sweat and Gatorade, wiped his face with his jersey and smiled, the exhaustion unable to mask his elation. "I… I don't know," he began, still catching his breath. "Coach just told us to leave it all on the floor. My teammates… they never stopped believing. They kept fighting, getting stops, grabbing boards. They trusted with the ball, and I just wanted to reward that trust. I stopped thinking and just… played."

Reporter: "You did more than play; you took over. And now, you're the City et Champions. You're headed to the Regionals, a whole new level of competition. What can the city, what can the entire region, expect next from Dasmariñas National High?"

Tristan's smile faded, replaced by the sa look of fierce, unwavering focus he had in the fourth quarter. He looked directly into the cara, his voice clear and steady above the din of the celebration.

Tristan: "We will win the Regionals. And next, the Palarong Pambansa."

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