Diamond No Ace: The Strongest Hitter Has Arrived

Chapter 343 - 343: Forcing Points



The first baseman completed the tag on Kominato cleanly and turned immediately toward third base, already tracking Kuramochi's position as he pivoted.

What he saw stopped his throwing motion before it had fully committed.

Kuramochi was not where the play had expected him to be. The distance he had covered since leaving second base was not the distance a player covered when running conservatively through a bag and holding up. It was the distance a player covered when they had decided, somewhere between second and third, that third base was not the endpoint of the play.

One out recorded. Runner in motion toward third. The first baseman released the throw.

He did not throw it on a direct line to the bag.

The decision happened in the same instant as the release, the kind of choice that players make when the margin for error in one option feels too dangerous to accept. A direct throw at full velocity to third base would arrive faster, but if the third baseman mishandled it under the time pressure, there was nothing between the ball and Kuramochi reaching home plate.

The bounce throw sacrificed some speed and accepted a slightly awkward catch in exchange for a ball that stayed in front of the fielder regardless of what happened.

The ball hit the dirt in front of third base, came up cleanly, and the third baseman gathered it.

By then, Kuramochi's foot was already on the bag.

"Safe!"

Two outs. Runner on third base.

In the Sensen dugout, Ugai released a breath that had been sitting in his chest for several seconds. The situation he had been most concerned about had not materialized. Seido had not tried to push Kuramochi home on the play, had not attempted to manufacture a confrontation between their baserunner's speed and the full relay sequence again so soon after the previous inning. Instead they had taken what the play gave them: a runner on third with two outs, Kuramochi in scoring position, and the at-bat now belonging to Isashiki Jun.

Ugai read the decision and sat with his interpretation of it.

The Seido coaching staff believed that their players outside of Yuuki and Zhang Han were capable of solving Maki. That was the only reading that made the approach coherent.

Parking Kuramochi on third base and letting Isashiki bat rather than forcing a run-or-bust play in the gap meant Coach Kataoka trusted the bat currently stepping into the box to do the work. In a team with lesser confidence in its own depth, the calculus would have been different.

The gap between a powerhouse program and an ambitious one often came down to exactly this kind of situation. Sensen's players had the work ethic and the preparation. What they had never fully developed was the settled internal certainty that came from years of repeated success at the highest levels, the kind that allowed a team to make a difficult choice in a difficult moment without the decision itself requiring conscious courage.

Ugai envied it without resentment. It was simply what it was.

The coldness in his eyes was separate from the envy. Confidence was a genuine asset in competitive baseball, and he recognized it as such. But confidence and arrogance were separated by less distance than most people assumed, and the players Seido was currently deploying were fifteen and sixteen years old.

The weight Coach Kataoka had placed on their shoulders was real and the trust behind it was genuine. Whether the players could actually carry it under the specific conditions of a close game against a motivated opponent was still the question the field was asking.

They were about to find out.

With two outs, the tactical complexity of the inning had simplified considerably. Kuramochi's speed at third base represented a potential run but not a stolen base threat that required constant attention.

The catcher could focus on the batter without the additional management overhead of a runner likely to break on any pitch. Sensen could concentrate their full attention on Isashiki Jun, and Maki could pitch to the situation without the fractured focus that a live baserunner demanded.

Maki looked in at the batter and set his attention there entirely.

Isashiki Jun, standing in the hitting area, read the mound with the particular expression of someone who has been studied and assessed and found that to be an affront.

He understood what Maki's gaze communicated. The first-year pitcher with the enormous frame and the pitch that had been giving the Seido lineup difficulty all afternoon was looking at him as the problem to be solved rather than the threat to be respected. That assessment was, in Isashiki's view, a mistake in the making.

He would grant that Maki had genuine ability. The height, the delivery mechanics, the curveball that arrived at the plate from an angle that batters were not naturally calibrated to handle, all of it was real and had been making a real difference in the game. Acknowledging the quality of the challenge was not the same as being intimidated by it.

"Are you taking me for a pushover?"

The words stayed internal. The feeling behind them did not.

At third base, Kuramochi measured his lead with the careful precision of a player who understood that two outs changed the geometry of baserunning completely. With two outs, conventional wisdom said the runner moved on contact, held with a strikeout, and did not attempt anything that introduced unnecessary risk. The situation was already in Seido's favor if Isashiki could put the ball in play. There was no need for additional complications.

Kuramochi was conducting his own private assessment of what constituted necessary and unnecessary.

He drifted further off the bag, weight forward, timing Maki's delivery rhythm with the attention of someone making a specific calculation rather than simply taking a routine lead.

Isashiki set himself, raised his bat, and let his body language communicate what he intended to do with the next pitch: take a full swing and drive the ball. The message was delivered clearly enough that the Sensen catcher registered it and signaled to the outfielders to shift their depth backward.

The field spread out in response.

Maki took his stance and began his delivery.

Kuramochi's foot hit the dirt.

He was not moving on contact. He was moving now, mid-pitch, directly toward home plate on a steal attempt that the distance between third base and the catcher made look like an act of pure aggression rather than baseball strategy.

The fans in the stands felt it in their palms before their minds had finished processing what they were watching. A steal of home required a window measured in fractions of a second, a pitcher mid-delivery who could not redirect the pitch, a catcher who had to receive, transfer, and tag in the same compressed moment that the runner was covering twenty-seven feet at full speed. Professional players attempted it rarely. High school players attempted it almost never.

Kuramochi was attempting it.

The Sensen catcher saw it and sent a signal instantly, his body already shifting behind the plate. The instruction was clear: abandon the curveball, throw a fastball outside the zone, give me something I can receive cleanly and get down quickly.

Maki was mid-delivery but the adjustment was within reach. He shifted his grip in the final moment of his arm motion, two fingers coming together, the pitch converting from the breaking ball he had planned into a fastball sent outside the strike zone for maximum catchability.

The coordination between them was the product of repeated practice on exactly this scenario. They had drilled the steal-of-home response until the communication and execution were nearly automatic. The confidence behind the adjustment was genuine.

Isashiki Jun watched the pitch change.

He had not solved the curveball yet, had been honest with himself about that limitation throughout the at-bat. The curveball arrived from an angle that his timing was still calibrating to. The fastball was a different proposition. Outside the zone or not, a fastball from Maki was a pitch that Isashiki's eyes could track and his hands could find.

Ninety percent confidence. He committed.

"Ping!"

The contact was clean and full, the barrel meeting the ball at the point where the swing was generating its maximum force. The Sensen outfielders who had shifted their depth backward in response to the catcher's signal were now facing a ball coming down in front of them, their momentum pointed in the wrong direction and their recovery time insufficient.

The ball hit the grass and bounced forward, through the space that the repositioned defense had vacated.

The inning had just changed shape entirely.

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