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Chapter 26 / 325

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Chapter 26 - 16: Coonie’s Ability?

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[3rd Quarter – 3 Minutes Remaining]

[Orlando Hoops – 71

Vorpal Basket – 54]

The crowd buzzed with confusion.

People whispered, murmuring among themselves as they saw

Evan Cooper and Lucas Graves walking toward the bench.

Instead, three

bench players

stepped onto the court.

Coonie Smith. Jeremy Park. Kai Mendoza.

But

Brandon Young, the team's center, stayed in.

They didn't have another true center on the bench.

If Brandon sat,

the paint would be completely unguarded.

Then Orlando Hoops' starters blinked, their expressions shifting from focused to

surprised.

Alec Storm scoffed.

"What the hell? They're giving up?"

Mason Hayes smirked.

"That's what it looks like."

Julian Cross chuckled, shaking his head.

"Pathetic."

Even Coach Guy Corson, who had been fully locked in,

narrowed his eyes.

"(They're subbing out their starters? What is this...?)"

He studied the three new players on the court.

They didn't look special.

No insane physique. No intimidating presence.

Just

benchwarmers.

He exhaled sharply.

"Tch. Stick to the plan."

"YES, COACH!"

Orlando Hoops shouted in unison.

They weren't about to let up.

Not now.

Not ever.

...

[Vorpal Basket's Side]

Ethan Albarado stood in the middle of his new lineup, rolling his shoulders as he turned to them.

Coonie Smith cracked his knuckles.

Jeremy Park adjusted his headband.

Kai Mendoza bounced on his feet, shaking off the nerves.

Brandon Young clenched his fists, already preparing himself for a battle in the paint.

Ethan's blue eyes

sharpened.

"LISTEN UP."

Coonie, Jeremy, and Kai immediately snapped to attention.

Brandon, still sweating from the previous plays, nodded slightly.

Ethan's voice was

low. Firm. Unshakable.

"This is not about scoring."

Coonie blinked.

"What?"

Ethan's gaze

hardened.

"We're not here to win this quarter. We're here to buy time."

Kai nodded slowly.

"You mean... to keep the game within reach?"

Ethan smirked.

"EXACTLY."

His eyes flickered toward the Orlando Hoops players, who were already

waiting for the inbound.

"All we need to do is slow them down."

Jeremy frowned.

"We're not strong enough."

Ethan's smirk widened.

"That's why I boosted you."

Coonie's eyes widened.

"Huh?"

Ethan

mentally activated his system screen.

A soft

ding

echoed in his head.

.....

[ACTIVE BOOSTS]

TEAM SYNERGY (+1 TO ALL ATTRIBUTES FOR 10 MINUTES)DEFENSE BOOST (+2 TO DEFENSE FOR 5 MINUTES – COONIE, JEREMY, KAI, BRANDON)SHOOTING ACCURACY BOOST (+3 TO SHOOTING FOR 5 MINUTES – COONIE)

.....

Ethan grinned.

"You guys are better than you think."

Coonie's fists clenched.

Jeremy's breathing steadied.

Kai

smirked.

Brandon, still standing near the free-throw line, cracked his knuckles.

"ALRIGHT, THEN. LET'S MAKE SOME NOISE."

.....

[3rd Quarter – 2:58 Remaining]

The

whistle blew.

Orlando Hoops had possession.

Alec Storm dribbled up the court, his usual cocky smirk still present.

Then—he saw

Coonie Smith.

Standing in front of him.

Not Evan Cooper. Not Lucas Graves.

Coonie.

Alec let out a short laugh, shaking his head.

"You're guardiang me?"

Coonie swallowed hard.

His stance was low, his arms wide, but—his feet felt

heavy.

His breathing?

Already uneven.

He wasn't

used

to guarding someone like Alec.

Alec

wasn't just fast.

He was

elite.

And Coonie?

He was a

benchwarmer.

Still, he refused to back down.

Alec snorted.

"Alright then. Let's see how long you last."

Then—

he attacked.

A

sharp crossover.

A

hard drive.

Coonie tried to

react,

shifting his weight—

But Alec was

too fast.

His feet dragged behind

half a second too slow.

Alec surged forward, already getting past him—

Jeremy Park rotated in, stepping into the lane.

Alec clicked his tongue.

"(TWO ON ME?)"

Jeremy's defense

wasn't perfect.

His reaction was

a little late.

His footwork was

a little sloppy.

But it was

just enough

to slow Alec down.

Just enough

to make him rethink his move.

Alec looked up.

Mason Hayes—wide open.

He passed—

Kai Mendoza jumped the passing lane.

Alec's eyes widened.

STEAL.

"FAST BREAK!"

Ethan yelled.

Kai

took off.

But—his dribble was

shaky.

The ball

nearly

bounced too high on his second step.

He barely

held on.

His body

felt slow.

Orlando's defense

caught up immediately.

They were closing in.

"KAI, PASS!"

Kai

panicked.

His eyes flicked to Ethan.

His heart pounded.

His hands—

moved instinctively.

He flicked the ball toward Ethan without hesitation.

A

simple

pass.

Not

perfect.

Not

fast.

But

just enough

to reach.

Kai's breath came out ragged.

"(Did I almost screw that up?)"

His hands were

shaking.

His movements felt

off.

He wasn't playing like a star.

He was playing

like what he was.

A bench player.

Across the court, Coonie's knees

felt weak.

His arms

burned

from just

one

defensive possession.

He had barely been able to keep up.

He wasn't

stopping Alec.

He was just

slowing him down.

Just

delaying

the inevitable.

Coonie gritted his teeth.

"(DAMN IT... They're just too good...)"

But then—

He saw

Ethan's smirk.

That

damn

smirk.

Like he had planned this.

Like he

knew

this would happen.

Coonie

clicked his tongue.

"(TCH... I GET IT NOW.)"

Ethan didn't

put them in to dominate.

He didn't expect them to

carry.

He just needed them to

buy time.

Coonie's breathing was rough, but—

he stayed locked in.

They weren't

winning this quarter.

But they just had to

survive it.

Three more minutes.

That was all.

.....

[3rd Quarter – 2:00 Remaining]

Coonie's breath was ragged.

His chest heaved, his legs felt like lead, and his arms?

Shaking.

But despite everything—they were

still in it.

Not winning.

Not dominating.

But

surviving.

He glanced up at the scoreboard, wiping the sweat from his brow.

[Orlando Hoops – 73]

[Vorpal Basket – 56]

Still

down big.

Still getting

outplayed.

But—this wasn't the

massacre

he expected.

They weren't completely getting crushed.

They weren't collapsing.

They were

hanging on.

Coonie exhaled sharply, his mind

racing.

"(We're keeping up... but how?)"

It didn't make sense.

He wasn't

this good.

Kai Mendoza wasn't

this fast.

Jeremy Park wasn't

this solid in the paint.

They were

benchwarmers.

Not starters.

Not elite players.

And yet—

they were holding their own.

Coonie narrowed his eyes.

Something

felt off.

Not in a bad way.

But... in a way that didn't feel

natural

He stole a glance at Ethan Albarado.

Ethan stood near half-court, watching everything unfold.

Composed.

Calm.

And that damn

smirk

still on his face.

"(Did... he do something?)"

Coonie's grip tightened on his jersey.

He knew himself.

He

knew

he wasn't playing this well.

So what the hell changed?

His eyes flicked to Kai Mendoza.

The guy was

moving faster than usual.

Not insanely fast.

Not star-player quick.

But

just enough.

Kai wasn't beating his defenders, but he was

keeping up.

He was

contesting shots.

Reading plays

just a little bit faster.

Jeremy Park—normally

outmuscled

in the paint—wasn't winning rebounds.

But he was

boxing out harder.

Jumping

a little bit higher.

Coonie clenched his jaw.

"(Nah... that's stupid, Coonie. That's not how this works)"

A coach's speech?

Some dramatic pep talk?

That

wasn't enough

to suddenly make a bench player perform like this.

There was something

else.

Something

Ethan had done.

Coonie wasn't sure

what.

But one thing was clear—

They just had to

hold on.

Two more minutes.

....

Ethan Albarado exhaled sharply, watching his teammates struggle to keep up.

It wasn't pretty.

Coonie, Kai, and Jeremy?

They were

barely hanging on.

They weren't

beating

the Orlando starters.

But they weren't

collapsing, either.

Ethan wiped the sweat from his forehead and narrowed his eyes.

"(As expected, the card helped them keep up a little bit... But that's that...)"

He glanced at the Orlando players.

Alec Storm.

Mason Hayes.

Julian Cross.

Jaxon Wells.

Ethan Blake.

They were

monsters.

They weren't just talented.

They were

well-trained.

Disciplined.

Refined.

"(These guys trained their whole lives for this.)"

Basketball wasn't just a

game

to them.

It was a

lifestyle

A career.

A future.

And Vorpal Basket?

What did they have?

Nothing.

Ethan clenched his fists.

"(Thanks to our fucking coach, our team doesn't even have a motivation to train.)"

It was obvious.

Who the hell would train their ass off

when they lost every game?

When their coach

didn't care?

When their system was

built for failure?

Ethan gritted his teeth.

"(No one believes in us.)"

They were

benchwarmers.

Losers.

Nobodies.

And yet—

Right now...

They were

still here.

Still

fighting.

Ethan's gaze shifted to Coonie.

Despite his heavy breathing, despite the exhaustion in his eyes—

He

wasn't backing down.

And then—

A system notification popped up.

[SYSTEM DETECTED HIDDEN ABILITY]

Ethan raised an eyebrow.

"(HUH?)"

The translucent blue window flickered in front of him.

[Clutch Instinct] (Locked Ability)

Description:

A latent skill that awakens when Coonie Smith is placed in a high-stakes moment. Under intense pressure, his mind sharpens, and his body reacts instinctively, allowing him to perform beyond his usual capabilities.

Ethan's eyes widened slightly.

"(HOH...)"

A hidden talent?

Coonie had

something like this?

Ethan glanced at him again.

He looked dead tired.

But his stance?

Still solid.

His eyes?

Still locked in.

Ethan smirked.

"(This guy... If he hone this skill...)"

"(He could be a damn problem on the court.)"

Maybe not now.

Maybe not even this game.

But if Coonie

pushed himself

—if he

learned how to awaken this ability on command

He could turn into a player

no one expected.

Ethan stretched his fingers, letting out a deep sigh.

He already knew what was coming next.

"(Orlando's coach is smart. He's probably going to sub out the starters now.)"

These guys weren't

machines.

They weren't going to

waste energy

if they didn't need to.

And Vorpal's bench?

They weren't

good enough

to warrant keeping Orlando's best players on the court.

Coach Corson wasn't stupid.

He was going to give his starters a break.

Which meant—

Vorpal had a

tiny

window.

A chance to

steal some momentum back.

Ethan grinned.

"(Well then... Let's see what we can do with it.)"

....

[3rd Quarter – 1:20 Remaining]

[Score Update:]

Orlando Hoops – 74

Vorpal Basket – 58

Coach

Guy Corson

stood on the sidelines, arms crossed, his sharp eyes locked onto the court.

His starting five—

Alec Storm, Mason Hayes, Julian Cross, Ethan Blake, and Jaxon Wells

—were still playing with intensity.

But he wasn't blind.

He could see it.

The exhaustion creeping in.

Jaxon's movements weren't as explosive.

Mason's footwork was slightly slower.

Alec's reactions were just a little delayed.

They had been running the entire quarter at full intensity.

And Vorpal Basket?

They were

still fighting.

Coach Corson clenched his jaw.

"(My team is exhausted. At this rate, they can't handle half a minute of the 4TH quarter if this continues.)"

His fingers

tapped

against his arm.

It was

time.

He raised his hand toward the score table.

"SUBS! FIVE IN, FIVE OUT!"

The referee

blew the whistle.

The entire gym went

silent for a second.

Then—murmurs.

"What? He's subbing all of them?"

"Alec's going to the bench? Even Jaxon?"

"Wait—why now?"

Ethan Albarado's eyes

narrowed.

He saw

Alec Storm glance toward the bench

, frustration flashing in his eyes.

Alec

hated

sitting out.

But he wasn't stupid.

He knew Corson was making the right call.

Jaxon Wells, the dominant center, took a deep breath as he walked toward the bench.

He wiped sweat from his forehead, his massive frame

still radiating intensity.

As he passed Ethan, he muttered—

"Don't think this sh*t is over."

Ethan smirked.

"Never did."

Lucas Graves, standing nearby,

exhaled sharply.

"They're resting their main five..."

Evan Cooper cracked his knuckles.

"Albarado knows what his doing."

Coach Corson turned toward his

second unit

—the backup squad.

They weren't as strong.

But they

knew their job.

Hold the lead. Control the pace. Run the clock.

Corson's eyes

hardened.

"(Even if they close the gap a little, as long as my starters rest, we'll crush them in the fourth.)"

He watched as his backups jogged onto the floor.

And across from them—

Ethan Albarado was

grinning.

"(THIS... THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I NEEDED.)"

To be continue

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