"Ping!"
The bunt rolled out along the first base line, and the Seido infield moved.
In the stands, the play produced a different quality of attention than the previous innings had. Sensen had spent the first two outs absorbing the situation quietly, and now they were doing something about it.
A weaker team trying to manufacture an outcome against a stronger one through unconventional means was a more interesting problem than a weaker team simply trying to out-execute a stronger one on the same terms.
Ugai had never approached the West Tokyo powerhouses any other way.
A reporter had asked him about this directly during the previous season, pressing him on why he continued with tactical approaches that hadn't produced wins against the top programs. His answer had been the kind that reporters noted without being entirely sure what to do with.
"Not winning doesn't mean the tactics failed. Look at how the gap between us and the powerhouses has changed over the past few years."
He had squinted when he said it, in the way of a person who might be making a genuine point or might be finding a diplomatic frame for a stubbornly held preference. The reporter had not been able to determine which, and neither had most of the people who read the interview afterward.
What everyone understood from watching Sensen play was that Ugai liked to win through surprise, had built his program around that style, and was not going to change it simply because the results against the top tier had been consistently negative.
The fact that they were attempting it now meant they were treating this game as a real game rather than a scheduled loss.
In the Seido dugout, several players stood up to watch.
Then they saw what Yuuki did.
He was already moving when the ball left the bat, charging toward it from first base with the decisiveness of a player who had made his read before the bunt had fully developed. He reached the ball, picked it up, and threw it back toward first base without turning his head to look.
The Seido players watching from the dugout registered the problem immediately.
Kawakami was supposed to cover first base on a bunt. He was standing near the mound with the expression of someone who had just been surprised by the development of a play and had not yet caught up to it. The bag was uncovered. Yuuki's throw was in the air, moving toward a location where no one was standing.
The groan that moved through the dugout was collective and involuntary.
Then Kominato Ryosuke appeared.
He had broken from second base the moment the bunt developed, reading the trajectory of the sequence and committing to the coverage before the problem had fully presented itself to anyone else. He arrived at the bag, caught the ball, and kept his foot on the base.
"Snap!"
"Out!"
The batter was still two steps away.
The dugout's groan converted into something louder and less organized. Fans in the stands reacted the same way. What they had just watched was two plays layered on top of each other: Yuuki throwing accurately to a location without looking back at it, and Kominato already being there to receive it, both players operating on the assumption that the other would fulfill their part of the sequence without needing to verify it in real time.
The trust embedded in that play was not something that could be practiced in isolation. It was the product of a specific kind of familiarity between two players who had been competing and training together long enough to know what the other would do before they did it.
Three outs. Side retired.
In the Sensen dugout, Ugai's hand found his chin and stayed there, working at it until the skin reddened.
The batter's timing on the play had been fractionally wrong. The read should have come the moment the bat made contact, committing to full acceleration before the fielding situation had resolved. Instead, there had been a brief watch on the ball, and that fraction of hesitation had been exactly the fraction the play required. A hair's breadth, compounded across twenty meters of running, translated into two steps short at the bag.
No ifs. The inning was over.
"I said I envy the Directors at those powerhouse schools. They can find any kind of player they need. Our group..."
He trailed off in the direction of a complaint that his players had heard before and would likely hear again.
The first inning moved to Seido's half, and the mood in the dugout had shifted in a way that was not comfortable for anyone sitting in it. Sensen had almost manufactured something out of nothing in the bottom of the first, and the near-miss had communicated a message more effectively than any pre-game preparation could have delivered: this team was capable of making problems, and the margin for error against them was real.
The players came up to bat with the particular energy of a group that had been startled into attention and wanted to respond immediately and forcefully.
The response did not come.
Maki stood on the mound at 190 centimeters tall, his presence occupying a different visual register from the pitchers Seido had faced in the previous two games, and retired the first three batters in sequence without allowing meaningful contact.
Three up. Three down.
The dugout sat with the results and looked at each other with expressions that had no comfortable interpretation.
The scouting data on Maki had been available. They had reviewed it. What the data had not conveyed with sufficient force was what it actually felt like to stand in the box against a pitcher of that height throwing with that velocity, the angle of descent on the ball arriving from above in a way that disrupted the timing assumptions built through thousands of repetitions against pitchers of ordinary stature. The small-step delivery was unusual. The style was still developing, the edges unfinished, but the core of what Maki was building was already evident enough to be a genuine problem.
In the stands, Takashima Rei watched with an expression that carried a specific quality alongside the assessment.
She had known about Maki before the recruitment period. The physical profile had registered: a large frame carrying significant raw power, the kind of combination that produced exceptional pitching velocity when the mechanics were functioning correctly.
She had also identified what she considered a structural limitation. Players of extreme height tended to carry stiffness in their movements, a rigidity in the delivery that created mechanical inefficiencies that were difficult to correct fully and that placed a ceiling on how far the raw tools could translate into competitive results.
She had passed on Maki based on that assessment.
What she was watching now was a player whose stiffness had not disappeared but had been worked around, the overall delivery finding a shape that allowed the velocity and the angle to function together in a way that her projection had not anticipated developing this quickly.
The projection had been wrong in its timeline, at minimum.
Manager Ota sat in the Seido dugout running his own kind of assessment, and arriving at conclusions that were less about Maki and more about his own team.
The question he had been circling for several days without wanting to land on it directly was now unavoidable: who was the reliable pitcher on this staff? Tanba had performed well in the second game under favorable conditions, but Tanba's performance under pressure had a history that made favorable conditions a necessary qualifier.
Kawakami was precise and steady, but the margin he operated on was thin, and a team capable of applying sustained offensive pressure would test that margin severely. Zhang Han was developing, genuinely, but the left arm was still new and the outings that had produced good results had come against limited opposition.
The first two tournament wins had obscured this problem because the opponents had not been capable of exposing it. Sensen was exposing it in the first inning.
"Today's game might not be easy at all."
The thought had barely finished forming when Maki delivered his third strikeout of the inning.
The comfortable expressions that some of the Seido players had been carrying into the game had not survived the bottom of the first inning.
They were gone now.
************************************
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