Chapter 348 - 348: The Only Opportunity
The foul ball spun away, and the Sensen catcher sat behind the plate with a new and unwelcome piece of understanding forming in his mind.
The possibilities available to explain what Kominato Ryosuke was doing narrowed themselves down as the at-bat extended. By the time the count had moved through several pitches without Kominato offering at anything questionable and fouling off anything that entered the zone cleanly, there was only one interpretation left that accounted for all of it. The others had been eliminated one by one.
He was forcing a walk.
Not simply taking pitches and waiting for a favorable one. Not working the count with the patience of a batter who wanted a good pitch to hit. Something more specific and more aggressive than either of those: using the foul ball as a tool to extend at-bats past the point where a pitcher's command could remain consistent, deliberately running up the pitch count until the control deteriorated on its own and the walks appeared not because the batter had taken them but because the pitcher had thrown them.
The catcher found the conclusion difficult to accept, partly because of how unusual it was and partly because accepting it meant acknowledging that they were already in the process of losing the at-bat regardless of what signal he sent next.
On the mound, Maki felt it more directly than anyone.
He had come into this game with the intention of demonstrating something specific to specific people, and the at-bat currently in front of him was producing a different demonstration than the one he had planned. He threw into the zone and the ball came back foul. He threw into the zone again and the ball came back foul again.
Each pitch that entered the strike zone was being redirected rather than driven, controlled contact that kept the ball out of play and kept the at-bat alive without giving the defense any opportunity to act. The precision of it, the consistency of finding the foul territory on pitch after pitch from a batter who was not particularly tall and did not look from a distance like someone capable of this level of bat control, was generating a specific feeling in Maki that he did not have a comfortable word for.
Disrespect was the closest available term, even though he understood intellectually that what Kominato was doing required genuine skill rather than anything dismissive.
He refused to accept the conclusion and kept throwing.
By the ninth pitch, the refusal had produced the outcome it was always going to produce. Maki's command, which had never been the technical strength of his game, could not sustain the precision required indefinitely. A ball arrived outside the zone, the fourth of the at-bat, and the umpire made the call.
"Walk."
Kominato dropped the bat without any visible reaction, as though the result had been scheduled rather than earned, and moved to first base.
No outs. Runner on first.
Maki stood on the mound and processed what had just happened. He was not convinced by it. He was also not in a position to change it, and recognizing that distinction did not make the feeling more comfortable.
The effect on his subsequent pitching was visible almost immediately. The mechanics that had been producing reliable command through four innings and the early part of the fifth started showing variance. Pitches that should have found corners were missing them. The rhythm that Kawakami had been respecting from the other side of the field was disrupted by something internal that Maki was managing imperfectly.
Isashiki Jun stepped in and watched two pitches miss outside. The pattern was not difficult to identify. Maki's control had loosened, and an at-bat against a pitcher who had lost his location offered two options: swing aggressively when something appeared in a hittable zone, or continue to wait and let the walk accumulate. Isashiki evaluated both and made his decision.
He waited. The fifth pitch arrived approximately one ball below the center of the strike zone, close enough to the heart of the plate that the location itself was the invitation.
He swung.
"Ping."
The ball found a gap in Sensen's defensive alignment and rolled through cleanly. Isashiki ran through first base. Kominato, who had been moving from the moment the ball cleared the infield, did not stop at second base but continued, reading the trajectory and the outfielder's angle and calculating that the distance was available. He touched third base and held.
No outs. Runners on first and third.
The scoring opportunity sitting in front of Seido was as complete as one could construct without anyone having crossed the plate yet. The geometry of the situation had arranged itself into something that gave Sensen very limited options and none of them without cost.
Yuuki Tetsuya was next.
The directional logic of the inning pointed clearly toward what Sensen would do. Walking Yuuki loaded the bases and brought Zhang Han up in a situation where the walk option was still technically available but was becoming progressively more difficult to justify given what Miyuki had done the last time he faced Maki with the bases loaded. The alternative was to face Yuuki directly, which was the confrontation Sensen had been designed throughout the afternoon to avoid.
Four pitches. Four balls. Yuuki moved to first base without swinging once.
Bases loaded. No outs.
Zhang Han stood in the on-deck area and felt the moment land in him with a weight that had been accumulating across the entire game.
He had been walked twice. Both times, the decision had been made before he took his first step into the box, Ugai running his probability model and arriving at the same conclusion each time: the cost of facing Zhang Han in a dangerous situation exceeded the cost of accepting the consequences of the walk.
The frustration of standing at the plate and watching pitch after pitch arrive in locations that made swinging impossible had been one of the more genuinely difficult experiences of his first year of competitive high school baseball. The want to compete and the absence of any available outlet for it was a specific kind of pressure that he had not fully developed the tools to absorb without residue.
Now the bases were loaded. Walking him scored a run. The walk option still existed in theory, but its cost had just become direct and immediate rather than probabilistic. And Miyuki was hitting behind him, which meant the cost of walking Zhang Han to face Miyuki instead was not obviously lower than the cost of facing Zhang Han directly, because Miyuki had already proven he could hit Maki.
The eighty-percent estimate Zhang Han had assembled in his mind was perhaps conservative.
They were going to have to face him.
He had been waiting for this since the first inning, through two intentional walks and two half-innings of watching from first base while his team worked through the middle of the order. The patience required to absorb that waiting without it becoming something that contaminated his approach had been tested in ways that previous games at Seido had not tested it. He had managed it, and the managing had felt like growth in the moment even when it felt like frustration.
The reward for the patience was standing in front of him now: bases loaded, no outs, a pitcher whose command had frayed, and a game situation that was very likely going to force the confrontation he had been wanting since the pregame warmup.
His heart rate had adjusted upward in a way he was fully aware of and had no particular interest in suppressing. The feeling was appropriate to the situation.
He picked up his bat and moved toward the plate.
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