Chapter 336 - 336: The Same Kawakami?
The white ball covered the distance in a fraction of a second.
At the speed Kawakami's fastball traveled, the gap between release and arrival was measured in tenths of a second rather than anything a conscious mind could fully process in sequence. For elite high school players, this was not the obstacle it would be for an ordinary person.
Years of repetitive training had built the kind of automatic pattern recognition that allowed a capable batter to track a ball, process its trajectory, and commit to a swing within the time available. The limitation wasn't the speed itself.
The limitation was when the speed carried a disguise.
Kawakami's fastball at just over 130 kilometers per hour was, against a strong Sensen batter, something approaching a known quantity. A batter of that caliber, given a stationary machine and unlimited fastballs at that speed, could put the barrel on the ball at a rate that bordered on certainty.
Ninety out of a hundred, conservatively. More, with good timing. The modest velocity was the trade Kawakami had made for the precision that was his actual strength, and a batter who had identified that trade understood which side of it they were standing on.
The batter had made his read. The incoming pitch had the shape and the momentum of something he had already filed under manageable. His confidence was not arrogance. It was calibrated to what he was actually seeing.
His body committed.
The ball arrived.
Then it dropped.
Not gradually. Sharply, in the final stretch of its approach, the bottom falling out of the trajectory in a way that arrived without sufficient warning for a swing already in motion to adjust. The bat passed over the ball by a distance that, in terms of centimeters, was almost embarrassingly small. In terms of the outcome, it was everything.
The batter stood in the box with the briefly blank expression of someone whose body has completed an action that their mind has just been informed was entirely wrong.
From outside the field, the reactions came from people who understood what they had just seen.
"A sinker that sharp is genuinely rare."
"Kawakami Norifumi. I had assumed Seido's next Ace competition was between Zhang Han and Tanba. I didn't know they had someone else developing alongside them."
The admiration in the stands was real and specific. The sinker had not been the pitch of a pitcher learning a new weapon cautiously. It had been delivered with the conviction of someone who had decided, at the critical moment, to trust what they had built.
In the Seido outfield, Zhang Han stood without a nearby teammate to turn to, which spared him the need to articulate the thought he was sitting with.
The question forming in his mind was whether the person currently standing on that mound was recognizably the same Kawakami they had all been assessing for the past several months. The profile they had been working from was of a pitcher whose excellence was a function of control and placement, reliable and useful and operating within a defined set of expectations. What the sinker had just demonstrated was something that didn't fit inside those expectations.
The talent was not inferior to Hidezawa's. Zhang Han arrived at that assessment and sat with it honestly.
The competition for pitching opportunities on this team had just added a third genuine candidate to a contest that had previously been structured around two.
This was the kind of thing Zhang Han liked in principle. Competition was how standards were established and maintained, and he had no interest in a situation where his position was secured by the absence of challengers rather than by his own ability. He understood the value of genuine competition as a mechanism.
The complication was timing.
His left arm was in its early stages as a competitive pitching tool. What it needed most, more than anything else, was game experience. Every inning pitched at this level was irreplaceable in terms of what it developed in him.
The pitching staff had been operating with a relatively limited pool of arms, and that scarcity had created opportunities that a deeper pool would not. With Kawakami now establishing himself as a legitimate presence rather than a supporting option, the available innings would be distributed differently.
Less game experience meant slower development. Slower development meant the gap between what his left arm could currently do and what he needed it to do would take longer to close.
He couldn't manufacture additional hours in the day. His batting practice was already filling most of the discretionary time in the schedule. Individual pitching work beyond that was possible to carve out in theory, but carving it out in practice would require a partner, and partners for extra bullpen work weren't automatically available at any hour he decided he needed them.
The problem was real and had no clean solution at the moment. He put it aside and returned his attention to the field.
"Strike! Strike!! Strike!!! Strikeout."
The at-bat concluded with the Sensen batter having touched nothing. The sinker had appeared once and dominated the sequence, the threat of its reappearance making everything else more difficult to handle even when it wasn't thrown.
Three outs. Sensen retired.
Kawakami walked off the mound with the particular bearing of a pitcher who has just discovered something about himself that he hadn't been entirely sure was there.
The energy that moved through the Seido dugout in response was the kind that competition produced: a group that had been shaken into genuine alertness earlier in the inning, now watching one of their own perform at a level that answered the shaking.
Yuuki stepped to the plate to lead off Seido's half of the inning.
The assessments of Yuuki Tetsuya across various publications had been consistent in their conclusions. He was not the most prominent name on the roster in terms of public recognition, occupying the space behind Azuma Kiyokuni and Zhang Han in the hierarchy of attention that national coverage assigned.
But every serious analysis of what Seido's offense actually was pointed back to Yuuki as a structural element that the whole construction depended on. His on-base percentage was exceptional. His plate discipline was consistent. His at-bats were long in the way that produced both runs and the gradual erosion of opposing pitchers.
With Azuma Kiyokuni's graduation, the question of who would formally occupy the cleanup spot had been settled in Yuuki's favor by Coach Kataoka without much apparent deliberation.
The logic was simple enough: the position required someone who combined the ability to drive in runners with the reliability to make the opposing pitcher work, and Yuuki had been doing both for long enough that the question of whether he was ready was no longer the relevant question.
The conventional read on Sensen's strategy for this at-bat was available to everyone watching. Against a lineup that included a batter of Yuuki's profile, a team without deep resources and with a lead to protect had reasons to work around him: pitch carefully to the edges, accept a walk if necessary, concentrate on the batters on either side of him where the matchup felt more winnable.
That was the percentage play, and most people in the stadium were waiting to see if Sensen would take it.
Maki stood on the mound and looked in for the sign.
Then he threw the first pitch directly at Yuuki.
Not around him. At him.
The choice landed in the stadium with the clarity of a statement made in public.
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