No outs. Runner on first base.
Kuramochi's arrival at first base had sent a visible jolt through both dugouts, though for very different reasons.
The Seisenji players were still processing what they had just watched. The bunt had been fielded cleanly. The throw had been on time. By every reasonable measure, that should have been an out. The fact that it wasn't raised an uncomfortable question about what else their preparations had failed to account for.
The Seido players, meanwhile, had gone quiet in a different way. Thoughtful rather than stunned. Something in the at-bat had prompted a realization they were working through on their own.
Coach Kataoka watched their expressions and felt a quiet satisfaction.
Good. They were starting to see it.
This group of second-years had been called a poor harvest year when they arrived. That assessment wasn't baseless. Their raw ability when they first joined the program had been genuinely modest, and there had been real questions about what kind of ceiling they were working with. But they had put in the work, and the work had compounded in ways that went beyond physical improvement. They had learned to think on the field, to read situations and draw conclusions without needing everything spelled out for them.
That was the rarer quality. Plenty of players developed their bodies. Fewer developed the capacity to understand what the game was telling them in real time.
It might not separate anyone in high school, where raw athleticism often overwhelmed everything else. But at the next level, in college programs or professional organizations, players who could think independently on the field were players who lasted. They adapted. They extended careers that physical decline would otherwise end. That quality was worth more than most people recognized, and this group was beginning to demonstrate it.
Coach Kataoka had deliberately left his tactical guidance vague this inning. No specific instructions on how to approach Nishikawa. Just the reminder of what they had invested to be here. The rest he was leaving to them.
Now he wanted to see what they did with it.
"Second batter. Second Baseman. Kominato Ryosuke."
With Tanaka's graduation, Kominato had stepped into the regular second base role without significant competition. Coach Kataoka's decision to place him there carried genuine expectation behind it. He had appeared as a substitute during the Koshien games and had made a strong impression in limited time.
Nishikawa recognized him.
Another difficult one.
At Koshien, this player had forced a four-pitch walk in one of his at-bats. Four pitches, none of them convincing enough to swing at. Against a pitcher trying to work the edges and get ahead in the count, drawing a walk by refusing to be fooled was a form of discipline that required both patience and clarity of purpose.
Nishikawa was still forming his approach when the problem on first base demanded his attention.
Kuramochi was standing more than three meters off the bag, his weight distributed forward, his entire posture broadcasting what he intended to do as clearly as if he had announced it.
The message didn't need translating: try to throw me out. I dare you.
Nishikawa thought about Kuramochi's speed and felt his mood drop.
The math was simple and unpleasant. Seisenji's strength ran through Nishikawa, and Nishikawa was not a player who operated through physical dominance. His teammates reflected that. Ueki was the strongest player on the roster in terms of physical ability, and even Ueki could not deliver a throw from home plate to second base on the fly. The arc on that throw would require a bounce, and a bouncing throw to second base against Kuramochi's acceleration was not a play that had any realistic chance of succeeding.
The gap that existed between a grassroots program and a powerhouse became invisible in certain matchups. Against ordinary opponents, Seisenji's limitations never got fully exposed. Against Seido, every one of those limitations was being illuminated in sharp relief.
Don't panic.
Nishikawa repeated it to himself with the same steadiness he used to address his teammates in difficult moments. He had known this situation was possible before the game started. Anticipating something and experiencing it were different things, but the anticipation still counted for something. Panicking now would only accelerate the damage.
There was always a solution. That was the belief he had carried through every difficult match the team had faced. It just required finding it.
He decided to let Kuramochi have second base. Attempting to control a runner that fast with Ueki's throwing limitations was a losing proposition. The more urgent task was dealing with Kominato, who was standing in the box waiting with that particular composed attention that made him more difficult than his reputation alone suggested.
The moment Nishikawa settled into his delivery, Kuramochi was already moving.
He didn't hesitate, didn't look for a read, didn't wait to see if the pitch would be a ball. He simply went, running with the kind of acceleration that made the distance to second base look shorter than it was.
Ueki caught the pitch, stood up, and held the ball.
There was nothing to throw to. The play had already concluded.
"Is he cheating?"
The question floated up from somewhere in the stands, only half seriously.
"Even if he's cheating, he shouldn't be that fast."
"He's a first-year."
"What's his name?"
"Kuramochi. Kuramochi Yoichi."
The name moved through the crowd as the eyes of the spectators followed the player now standing on second base, casually adjusting his helmet as though stealing second against a pitcher mid-delivery was something he did between other tasks.
The flash of speed that had produced the result was rare enough in high school baseball to feel fresh, and the crowd responded to it with a warmth that pure pitching or hitting rarely generated. There was something about watching a human being move that fast that bypassed analysis and went directly to delight.
On the mound, Nishikawa gathered himself and prepared to face Kominato.
He had just begun his delivery motion when the situation on the bases changed again.
Kuramochi, apparently deciding that second base was a temporary arrangement rather than a destination, had started moving toward third.
Ueki's eyes went red behind his mask.
The complete disregard was one thing. The solution Ueki had prepared for himself, catching the next pitch and throwing directly to third, was a play he was confident in. Second base was uncertain. Third base was absolutely within his range, and he had already committed to the plan in his mind.
He caught the pitch cleanly and his arm came up.
A bat appeared in front of him.
Kominato had been watching for exactly this. The pitch, wherever it was in the zone, was going to be hit, because the situation demanded contact more than it demanded selectivity, and he had already decided to commit.
"With intentions that clear, even a bad pitch is hittable."
He said it with a smile, almost to himself, and drove the ball into the gap behind the shortstop position.
It was a quality hit, finding a location that turned the geometry of the infield unfavorable for the defense. Kominato held up at first, reading the play correctly and choosing not to push a situation that didn't require it.
Kuramochi didn't hold up anywhere.
He rounded third without breaking stride and pointed himself at home plate. The Seisenji outfielder who retrieved the ball was standing fifty or sixty meters from the plate. The arm strength required to cut down a runner at home from that distance was something the player simply didn't possess, and there was no particular shame in that. It was simply beyond the range of what he had.
"Safe!"
Seido had their first run.
The hit-and-run between the first and second batters in their very first official game together had produced exactly the kind of result that suggested they had done more than just practice the mechanics. They had internalized the thinking behind them.
Score: 1-0. No outs. Runner on first base.
The game was still very young.
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