With another ga scheduled for the following day, the afternoon practice session was kept deliberately asured.
Nobody was chasing sudden improvents in strength or skill. That kind of progress didn't happen in a single afternoon, and everyone on the roster understood that well enough not to chase it.
The goal was simpler: keep the body moving, maintain the sharpness that had been built through weeks of training, and avoid the subtle regression that ca from going completely still after a competitive day. Activity for the sake of staying ready, nothing more complicated than that.
By evening, everyone had gathered in the conference room.
The result of the parallel bracket ga had co through. Their second-round opponent was Hakuzan High School, a public school program that occupied a respectable middle ground in the Tokyo landscape. Not a powerhouse, but not a team that could be casually set aside either. With a functional lineup and a reasonable level of organizational strength behind them, they had managed to reach this stage through genuine performance rather than bracket luck.
"Just as expected."
The confirmation produced a quiet, collective nod across the room. Several players had already guessed Hakuzan would co through, but had kept the prediction to themselves on the chance they were wrong. The ga result had just made it official.
The margin told its own story: four to zero, and Hakuzan's advantage had been more decisive than the raw score suggested.
"Their Ace is a second-year nad Akai," Isashiki said, providing what background he had. "He had a strong reputation coming out of junior high."
The na carried so weight. Akai had drawn interest from multiple programs upon graduating junior high, including Seido and Ichidai San. Both programs had extended invitations. He had declined all of them and enrolled at Hakuzan instead, a decision that had confused people at the ti and continued to resist easy explanation.
Whatever his reasons, the result of his choice was now producing a fourth-to-zero victory in the second round of the Autumn Tournant.
Takashima Rei pushed her glasses up and leaned forward slightly.
"Hakuzan is different from Seisenji. Seisenji's run ca largely from the fact that nobody had seen their pitcher before. Hakuzan has gotten here through consistent performance. I won't say they're going to be a serious threat." She paused. "But I will say they're the best opponent we're likely to see before we reach the rounds that actually test us."
There was a thoughtfulness in how she said it. An opponent strong enough to reveal sothing real about the current team's capabilities, but not so strong that the encounter beca purely a damage-limitation exercise. That was a useful kind of opponent to have before the bracket delivered sothing genuinely dangerous.
In this regard, the Seido High School Baseball Team's draw had been unusually kind.
Coach Kataoka let his gaze travel around the room.
The players who t it didn't flinch. They didn't look away or shift their posture. They held it with a steadiness that was neither performative nor strained. The preparation was real, and the confidence sitting underneath it was real, and both of those things showed in the way the room absorbed the scrutiny without discomfort.
"Very good."
Even by Coach Kataoka's standards, that was a aningful statent.
He had been watching a quiet evolution in the team's collective character since Yuuki had taken over as captain. The influence of a leader spread through a group in ways that were difficult to fully trace but impossible to miss.
When Azuma Kiyokuni had been the spiritual center of the team, the energy around the roster had carried a particular quality, aggressive and slightly combustible, the kind that produced spectacular monts and occasional undisciplined ones.
Even Zhang Han, whose instinct ran toward patience and calculation, had absorbed sothing of that atmosphere and found himself swinging from the heels more often than his natural ga would have suggested.
Yuuki operated differently. Quiet, precise, economical with words and actions, and deeply reliable in every situation that asked sothing of him. The players around him had started reflecting those qualities back in the way groups tended to reflect their leadership, not through imitation but through a gradual calibration toward a shared standard.
Coach Kataoka valued this. The right captain for the right mont was not always the most talented player or the most visible one. It was the player whose particular qualities addressed what the team most needed. This team needed steadiness and self-assurance, and Yuuki provided both without effort.
"Tomorrow we play with everything we have. I'm fielding the full team." He let the statent settle. "Starting players from today, Yuuki, Zhang Han, Isashiki, you three sit tomorrow. Tanba pitches. Kawakami and Zhang Han, stay ready on the mound in case the situation calls for it. Outfield goes to Shirasu. First Base..."
He worked through the adjusted lineup thodically.
The players listening parsed the decision quickly. Coach Kataoka did not give up gas. That was an established fact about the man, and the directive that they would give their all made any interpretation involving strategic withdrawal impossible. Which left one explanation that fit all the facts: he believed in the players who were stepping into those spots, and he was giving them the field to prove they belonged on it.
The substitute players who had been waiting for their mont felt the weight of the opportunity land. It was the kind of weight that made eyes go slightly bright and produced the specific stillness of people trying to hold sothing important without letting it spill.
"Don't get too excited about it tonight. Rest well. Tomorrow is your ti."
Then Coach Kataoka turned his attention to Tanba.
"Tomorrow, our Ace leads us. The ga is yours. Any concerns?"
Tanba, who had spent the first ga watching from the dugout while soone else took the mound in what should have been his role on the team's most visible stage, sat up as though sothing had been injected directly into his spine.
"None."
The word ca out with a force that was entirely disproportionate to its length.
Zhang Han watched this exchange and felt sothing unexpected move through him.
He had been quietly carrying a specific worry since before the first ga. When Coach Kataoka had assigned him the starting pitching role and left Tanba on the bench for an important opening ga, Zhang Han had felt the awkwardness of benefiting from an arrangent that had to sting for the team's designated Ace.
He hadn't said anything about it because there was nothing useful to say. He wasn't the one who had made the decision. But he had been aware of it, aware of what Tanba had probably felt watching from the dugout, and uncertain what any subsequent coaching intervention could realistically do about it.
He had figured, honestly, that the damage was done.
A player who had been publicly passed over in favor of soone else, at a mont that mattered, did not simply recover from that because the next ga assignnt went differently. The logic of it felt clean and simple to Zhang Han: the fla had been dampened, and dampened flas didn't simply reignite from encouragent.
And then Coach Kataoka had looked at Tanba and said seven words.
And Tanba had answered with one.
And the person sitting in that chair right now looked nothing like soone operating with a dampened fla.
Zhang Han sat with this for a mont and felt a distinct chill that had nothing to do with the room temperature.
His Director had pushed Tanba to the edge of sothing difficult and then, in a single exchange, pulled him back and placed him higher than he had started. Not through consolation or flattery, but by making the second ga about him, by framing it as his ga to lead, by restoring the identity that the first ga had left in an uncertain place.
The manipulation of that sequence was precise enough to be architectural.
Zhang Han looked at Coach Kataoka with new eyes and had the quiet, unsettling realization that he had been operating under a significant underestimation of the person running this team.
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