The jarring clang of the halftime buzzer echoed through the Dasmariñas Arena, a sound that signaled a temporary truce in a ferocious battle. As the Black Mambas and Blue Jays retreated to their respective tunnels, the arena itself seemed to take a breath. The roar of the crowd simmered down to an excited hum, a symphony of whispered predictions, heated debates, and tactical speculations swirling among the thousands of fans. For the players, this fifteen-minute break was a sacred rite: a moment for respite and reset, for reflection and renewed resolve.
Halftime: A Tale of Two Locker Rooms
In the Black Mambas' locker room, the atmosphere was thick with concentration. The air, heavy with the scent of sweat, athletic tape, and a shared determination, was cut by the sharp sounds of ice packs being applied and water bottles being squeezed empty. Players sat on benches, towels draped over their heads, their chests still heaving from the first half's relentless pace.
Coach Gutierrez stood in the center of the room, his expression firm but calm, his whiteboard covered in diagrams and notes.
"Listen up," he began, his voice cutting through the exhaustion. "We hold a nine-point lead, but don't you dare think for a second that it's safe. A lead like that against the Blue Jays is paper-thin. They play fierce, and they play fast. They will come out of that locker room looking to erase this deficit on their first two possessions. We cannot let that happen. This next quarter, we maintain our pressure, we tighten our defense, and we finish our plays. Stick to your roles. No hero ball."
He turned, his gaze landing squarely on Tristan.
"Tristan, you're our floor general. That zone they showed gave us a little trouble. I want you to control the tempo from the jump. Use your skills, but use them sharply. Read the defense, find the mismatch. When you attack, be decisive. Lead with your voice, and lead with your moves. Let them know we're not backing down."
Across the court, in the Blue Jays' locker room, the mood was more volatile. Frustration warred with defiance.
"Nine points! We're letting him dictate everything!" Gardo Gerano slammed a water bottle onto the bench.
Their coach, a stern man with intense eyes, waited for the outburst to subside. "Getting angry won't win us the game, Gardo. Getting smart will. Richard, Raymond," he said, looking at the towering twins, "you are our advantage. We need to dominate the paint. I want every rebound. I want you demanding the ball. Alvin, Norman, you have to slow Herrera down before he gets into his rhythm. Be physical. Bump him off his path. Make him work for every single inch of the court. We fight for this, or we go home."
The Third Quarter Begins
The teams re-emerged to a fresh wave of cheers. A subtle shift in the Mambas' lineup was noted by the commentators. Joshua Velasquez and Felix Tan were starting the second half.
"An interesting adjustment by Coach Gutierrez," Rico observed. "Bringing in Tan and Velasquez. Looks like he wants to match the Rivera twins' size and physicality directly."
Tristan caught Marco's eye from across the court and gave a short, sharp nod—a simple signal of unspoken faith and shared purpose. Gab, now on the bench, wiped sweat from his brow as he watched, his intensity undiminished.
"This quarter will decide the momentum," he muttered to a teammate. "We have to push hard, no looking back."
"The Blue Jays always come out strong in the third," Joseph added, stretching his legs. "They'll fight for every possession."
The arena quieted to a hushed reverence as the referee took the ball at center court. The anticipation was a thick, tangible thing.
"And the third quarter begins!" the announcer's voice boomed. "The Black Mambas hold a nine-point lead, but the Blue Jays are known for their second-half surges! This is a defining stretch of the game, folks!"
Raymond Rivera and Felix Tan crouched, then exploded upwards. Their hands met the ball simultaneously, but Felix, with a final surge, managed to tip it towards Tristan.
Tristan calmly secured the ball, his mind already processing the floor. The faint glimmer of his Floor General badge sharpened his court vision. He began his dribble, his Tight Handles making the ball an extension of his arm. He faced Norman Navarro, who had taken his coach's words to heart, crowding him, trying to be physical. Tristan faked left, then executed a lightning-fast crossover that left Navarro a step behind.
"Horns! Horns!" Tristan's voice was steady and commanding. "Marco, flare out!"
He pushed ahead, drawing the defense before whipping the ball to Joseph at the elbow, who immediately reversed it to an open Marco on the wing. Marco didn't hesitate. He caught the ball, his body already rising into the shot. A quick trigger.
Swish.
The crowd roared. The lead was back to twelve.
Score: Black Mambas 41 — Blue Jays 29
Alvin Abaya responded with a vengeance, a blur of blue as he advanced with lightning speed. He drove hard into the lane, forcing the Mamba defense to collapse on him. Just as he was swallowed by defenders, he lobbed the ball over the top to Richard Rivera, who had sealed Felix Tan deep in the post. Richard caught it, turned, and lofted a powerful, unstoppable hook shot that dropped cleanly through the net. He followed it with a free throw, completing the three-point play.
Score: Black Mambas 41 — Blue Jays 35
Tristan recognized the momentum shift. He shifted gears. Activating his Dimer skill, he pushed the pace, his eyes scanning for an opening. He saw Joseph Rubio streaking from the opposite wing, making a hard cut toward the basket like a bolt of lightning. The bounce pass was a thing of beauty—a perfectly weighted, threaded needle of a pass that hit Joseph right in his hands. Joseph took one powerful step and hammered down a flush dunk that shook the entire basket stanchion.
The crowd erupted in a deafening cheer.
The Blue Jays, relentless, came right back. Norman Navarro drove hard, trying to rattle the Mambas' defense. But this time, Gab and Joshua, who had subbed in, converged on him, a well-executed trap that cut off all his passing lanes.
"Nowhere to go!" Gab grunted, breathing heavily as he mirrored Navarro's every move. "We're locking them down!"
From the sidelines, Coach Gutierrez clapped his hands. "Keep that energy! Every possession counts!"
In the paint, Richard Rivera worked viciously against Felix, their battle a showcase of brute strength. But it was on the boards that the twins made their mark. Raymond soared high for an offensive rebound over two Mambas, securing another possession for his team.
"The Rivera twins are reminding everyone in this arena why the Blue Jays are so fearsome," Leo commented. "They are physical, perfectly coordinated, and absolutely relentless."
On the next Mamba possession, Tristan found himself trapped by two defenders converging near the lane. Leaning on his Acrobat badge, he twisted, spun, and somehow flipped the ball up with lightning-agile footwork, evading the contact. But Richard Rivera was there to challenge. He slammed into Tristan, a hard foul meant to send a message. With his Fearless Finisher badge active, Tristan absorbed the blow, adjusted in mid-air, and completed the tough layup. The crowd roared its approval.
"BLACK MAMBAS! BLACK MAMBAS!"
Marco's defense began to suffocate Norman Navarro, who struggled to even get the ball across half-court. On offense, Marco was just as deadly. After a Blue Jays miss, he got the ball on a fast break, pulled up at the elbow, and drained a midrange jumper that felt like a dagger, pushing the lead back to double digits.
Score: Black Mambas 50 — Blue Jays 39
But Alvin and Gerano refused to quit. They accelerated again, pushing the pace to a frantic level. Gerano drove hard into the paint, tying up the ball with his defender, and threw up a wild shot as the whistle blew. It went in. He flexed as he walked to the line, sinking the free throw for the and-one.
Score: Black Mambas 50 — Blue Jays 45
The game exploded into a flurry of motion: Tristan's passes weaving through impossibly tight gaps, Joshua's rebounds fought for with fierce will, and Felix's defense rising to block a critical drive from Gerano.
"Every move matters," Tristan muttered to himself, dribbling up the court, the scoreboard a constant presence in his peripheral vision. "Every second counts."
The clock ticked down. Under ten seconds left in the quarter. Tristan drove, drew the defense, and kicked the ball out to an open Marco in the corner. Five seconds. Marco's shot was up. Four. The ball arced towards the basket. Three. The buzzer sounded, its harsh cry filling the arena. Two. One.
Swish. The net barely moved.
End of Third Quarter
Score: Black Mambas 56 — Blue Jays 51
Exhausted but galvanized by the buzzer-beater, the Black Mambas shared tired smiles and claps as they walked to the bench.
"That's the quarter we wanted," Gab said, slapping Marco on the back. "We held them off. Now, just one more push."
Across the floor, the Blue Jays regrouped, their faces grim but not defeated. Richard Rivera leaned in close to his teammates, his voice a fierce whisper. "We do not quit. We fight to the end."
Coach Gutierrez gathered his players, his voice filled with pride. "You weathered their storm. This is your game now. The final quarter is not about plays; it's about heart and execution. The Blue Jays fight hard, but you fight harder." He looked at each of them. "Rest, reset, then bring this same fire into the fourth."
The Black Mambas, sweaty and exhausted, nodded in unison, their shared dream within reach.
"The last quarter," Tristan said, his voice ringing with conviction, "is ours to claim."
As the arena lights dimmed softly for the short break, the anticipation hung thick and heavy in the air, a powder keg ready to ignite for the final, decisive battle.