Chapter 284: Philippines vs Thailand (1)
Chapter 284: Philippines vs Thailand (1)
Wednesday afternoon had finally arrived. The long bus ride from the Grand Rama Hotel to the Nimibutr Stadium was completely silent. Nobody listened to music. Nobody talked. The fifteen boys of the Philippine Under-18 National Team just stared out the thick glass windows at the busy streets of Bangkok. They were ready for war.
When they stepped out of the bus and walked into the dark concrete tunnels of the stadium, the noise hit them like a physical punch to the chest. It was not just a loud sound; it was a heavy, shaking vibration that actually rattled the bones inside their bodies.
The stadium was completely packed. Every single one of the 5,600 plastic seats was filled, but it sounded like there were fifty thousand people screaming inside the building. The entire crowd was wearing bright red shirts, the official color of the Thai National Team. It looked like a giant, moving sea of angry red water.
Loud, heavy drums were beating in a fast, wild rhythm. Boom-boom-boom-boom! Fans were blowing loudly into plastic horns. And then there was the chant. It was a very simple chant, but it echoed off the hard ceiling and sounded absolutely terrifying:
"THAI-LAND! SU-SU! THAI-LAND! SU-SU!"
(Thailand! Fight! Fight!)
Inside the private Philippine locker room, the air felt incredibly heavy and pressurized, like they were trapped deep at the bottom of the ocean.
Coach Dante Baldomero stood perfectly still in the very center of the room. He did not shout over the loud noise coming through the walls. He did not need to yell. His cold, quiet presence was somehow louder than the fifty thousand screaming fans outside.
"Do you hear that sound?" Coach Baldomero asked in a low voice. He slowly pointed one finger up toward the white ceiling, where they could hear thousands of feet stomping on the floor above them.
The players looked up nervously. Young Aiden Robinson swallowed hard. He was so scared that his throat felt completely dry. Joco Palencia was sitting on the wooden bench, rapidly bouncing his left leg up and down because of his nervous energy. Even the giant, strong Gab Lagman looked very tense and worried.
"They are not out there cheering for a fun basketball game," Baldomero said. His deep voice dropped into a harsh, scary whisper. "They are cheering for an execution. They completely expect their little Golden Boy, Suphawat, to run fast circles around the big, slow, clumsy Filipinos. They expect to dance and laugh on your graves today."
Coach Baldomero slowly turned his head and locked his dark eyes directly with Tristan Herrera.
"Tristan," the coach said. "Tell your team. What is our main objective today?"
Tristan stood up from his bench. He reached down and carefully adjusted the blue captain's band on his arm. His face showed absolutely zero emotion.
"Our objective is to turn this loud stadium into a quiet library, Coach."
Baldomero smirked. It was a very rare, scary smile that looked like a hungry wolf finding a meal.
"That is correct. We will silence them," Baldomero agreed. "But we will not silence them with words. We will silence them with cruelty. We will silence them with perfect, robotic efficiency. We will absolutely not run fast with them. If they want to run, we will break their legs."
The coach turned around and walked over to his large whiteboard. He picked up a black marker.
"This is the master plan for today. I call it Operation Quicksand."
He drew a few thick circles on the board.
"Suphawat wants to fly through the air. He wants to play fast and loose. So, we will put him deep into the heavy mud. On defense, we will switch our players on every single screen. Gab, Manio, Singson—listen to me very carefully. If you get switched onto guarding Suphawat, do not try to reach your hands in and steal the ball. He is too fast, and he will trick you. Just stand up straight and keep your arms high in the air. Make the little boy try to shoot the ball over the giant trees."
Baldomero then tapped the marker hard against the board.
"And on offense... we will pound the heavy rock. We will play slow. Every single time we have the ball, the ball must touch the painted area near the basket. We will use our size to beat them down until they cannot breathe."
The coach put his hand in the middle of the room.
"Pilipinas on three!"
Fifteen heavy hands slapped together.
"ONE! TWO! THREE! PILIPINAS!"
As the Philippine team jogged out of the dark tunnel and onto the bright wooden basketball court, the booing from the crowd was absolutely deafening. It felt like walking straight into a solid wall of hate and hostility.
Tristan led the line of boys. He looked high up into the seats. He saw thousands of faces painted in red and white colors, screaming angry insults down at them. Tristan did not understand the Thai language, but he perfectly understood the angry tone of their voices.
They were the intruders here. They were the enemy.
On the exact opposite side of the court, the Thailand team was already in a complete frenzy. They were jumping up and down and laughing.
Suphawat, wearing his bright red jersey with the number #1, was standing right in the center circle of the court. He was hyping up the crowd. He waved his arms wildly in the air, and the volume of the cheering instantly spiked higher. He pointed one finger at the basketball rim, and the crowd roared with excitement.
Suphawat was completely in his element. He was the Prince of Bangkok, and this was his royal castle.
The loud buzzer sounded. It was time for the team captains to meet in the middle.
Tristan walked calmly to the center circle.
Suphawat looked closely at Tristan. The Thai guard was chewing a piece of pink bubblegum very rapidly. He grinned a huge, cheeky smile, revealing a custom plastic mouthguard that was painted to look like the Thai national flag.
"Welcome to my house, Herrera," Suphawat said. His English was surprisingly good and clear.
Tristan reached out and firmly gripped Suphawat's hand. He did not squeeze too hard to try and act tough, but Tristan's hand was freezing cold and as hard as a rock.
"You have a very nice house," Tristan replied. His voice was completely flat and boring. "But we are here to renovate it."
Suphawat laughed loudly and pulled his hand away. "You are a very funny guy! Just try to keep up with me today, big man."
The Starting Lineups:
Philippines:
PG: Tristan Herrera (Captain)
SG: Marco Gumaba (Sniper)
SF: Joco Palencia (Put in the game early for his fast defense)
PF: Gab Lagman (The Wall)
C: Josh Manio (The Giant)
Thailand:
PG: Suphawat (The Ace)
SG: Kittipong (Three-point Shooter)
SF: Arthit (Fast Slasher)
PF: Chaiwat
C: Nattapong
The referee stepped between the two tall centers. He blew his silver whistle sharply.
Josh Manio and the Thai center, Nattapong, bent their knees.
The referee tossed the heavy orange ball high into the air.
Manio, using his massive seven-foot height advantage, easily reached up and slapped the ball backward toward Tristan.
The game had begun.
"Defense! Defense! Defense!" the massive crowd immediately started chanting in perfect unison.
Tristan slowly brought the ball up the court. The wooden floor felt different today. It felt like it was shaking. The energy in the building was completely wild and frantic.
As soon as Tristan crossed the half-court line, Suphawat ran up and pressed his body right against him. Suphawat was playing super aggressive, full-court defense.
He is very aggressive today, Tristan thought to himself.
Tristan quickly turned his back to Suphawat. He used his wide shoulders and his heavy body to shield the basketball.
[System Stat: Physical Strength - 88]
Suphawat tried to push Tristan, but the smaller Thai boy simply bounced off Tristan's hard back like a rubber ball hitting a brick wall.
Tristan held up his hand and signaled the play: Orbit Alpha.
Giant Gab Lagman ran up from the basket to set a hard screen.
Tristan dribbled the ball and rubbed his shoulder closely against Gab's body to escape the defender.
But Suphawat was a genius. He did not get stuck on Gab's huge body. Instead, Suphawat slithered right over the screen like smooth, flowing water. He was incredibly, unbelievably fast.
Tristan saw a tiny open space near the basket for a split second. He put his head down and drove hard.
But it was a trap. As soon as Tristan put the ball on the floor to dribble, the entire Thai defense collapsed inward. Three red jerseys instantly swarmed into the painted area, waving their arms wildly to block Tristan.
Tristan was stuck in the air. He quickly kicked the ball out, throwing a fast pass to Joco Palencia waiting in the corner.
Palencia caught the ball perfectly. But as soon as he touched it, thousands of fans sitting right behind him screamed at the top of their lungs to scare him.
Palencia hesitated for just one single second. He looked down at his feet.
That one second of hesitation was a huge mistake. The window of opportunity closed. The Thai defender ran fast and recovered his position, blocking Palencia's shot.
Palencia panicked and passed the ball right back to Tristan.
Tristan looked up at the giant shot clock above the basket. It was at 5 seconds. 4... 3...
Tristan had no choice. He had to force a bad shot. He took a hard step backward and shot a high jump shot right over Suphawat's outstretched hand.
Clang.
The ball hit the back of the metal rim and bounced high into the air. Miss.
The Thai center grabbed the rebound.
"RUN!" Suphawat screamed at the top of his lungs.
The transition speed of the Thailand team was blinding. It was faster than anything the Philippines had ever seen.
Suphawat did not even dribble the ball. He caught a pass and instantly threw a massive, one-handed baseball pass—throwing the heavy ball sixty feet all the way down the court.
The Thai forward, Arthit, was already sprinting as fast as a racehorse.
Arthit caught the long pass perfectly in stride. Gab Lagman was chasing him as hard as he could, but Gab was just one step too heavy and too slow.
Arthit jumped up and laid the ball easily into the hoop.
THA: 2 - PHI: 0
The stadium erupted in joy. The noise was totally disorienting. It made Tristan's ears ring loudly.
Tristan grabbed the ball from the referee. He took a deep breath to try and slow his own heartbeat down.
"Calm down! Let us play our slow game!" Tristan signaled to his team, pushing his hands down toward the floor.
He dribbled down and threw a safe, easy pass inside to Josh Manio standing right next to the basket.
Manio caught the ball. He turned his back and started to push the smaller Thai center, Nattapong, backward. Thud. Thud. Manio used his weight to get closer to the hoop.
Manio spun around quickly to shoot his favorite, unstoppable hook shot.
But Nattapong was very smart. Instead of fighting the giant, Nattapong did a trick called "pulling the chair." At the exact moment Manio pushed backward, Nattapong quickly jumped completely out of the way.
Because there was suddenly nothing there to lean on, Manio lost his balance. He stumbled backward clumsily, taking three steps without dribbling the ball.
Twweeeet!
The referee blew the whistle and rolled his fists. Traveling violation. Turnover. The Philippines lost the ball again.
"You are way too slow, big tree!" Suphawat taunted loudly, laughing as he ran right past the frustrated Manio.
Thailand took the ball out of bounds.
Suphawat caught the inbound pass. He waved his hand, telling all of his Thai teammates to move far away. He wanted to be completely alone with Tristan Herrera at the top of the three-point line.
The entire crowd in the stadium instantly understood what was happening. Fifty thousand people rose to their feet. It was a one-on-one duel between the two Aces.
Suphawat started to dance with the basketball. He did a slow hesitation dribble, rocking his shoulders. Then, suddenly, he did a lightning-fast double crossover between his legs. His hands moved so incredibly fast they looked like a blurry red circle.
Tristan bent his knees deeply and slid his feet perfectly. He stayed right in front of the Thai star.
[System Stat: Perimeter Defense - 75]
But Suphawat did not want to drive to the basket. He stopped his fast running completely on a dime. He jumped straight up into the air from twenty-eight feet away, far behind the normal three-point line.
It was a massively deep three-point shot.
Tristan jumped up as high as he could and shoved his large hand right into Suphawat's face to blind him. It was a perfect, textbook defense.
It did not matter at all.
Swish.
The ball went straight through the center of the net without even touching the metal rim.
THA: 5 - PHI: 0
Coach Baldomero stood perfectly still on the sideline. His face looked like it was carved out of solid gray granite rock. He did not call a timeout to save his team. He just stared a burning hole directly into Tristan's eyes. His eyes said one simple thing: Fix this right now.
Tristan felt a heavy, burning heat rising up inside his chest. It was not anger. He was not mad at Suphawat. It was total, absolute focus.
Suddenly, the blue System interface flickered brightly in front of his eyes.
[System Alert: Opponent Momentum is currently at 90%]
[System Alert: Philippine Team Morale is severely Shaken]
[Mandatory Action Required: You Must Assert Dominance Now]
Tristan caught the inbound pass under his own basket.
"Give me the whole floor. Give me space," Tristan told Joco Palencia in a flat, cold voice.
Tristan slowly walked the basketball up the shiny floor. He did not run. He took his time.
Suphawat was waiting for him at the half-court line. The Thai boy was grinning a huge smile, slapping his hands against the floor. "Come on, Captain! Show me what you can do!"
Tristan reached the large painted logo in the middle of the court.
He did not hold up his fingers to call a secret play. He did not look for a screen.
He simply accelerated.
[System Stat: Speed with the Ball - 90]
Tristan went from walking to sprinting at maximum speed in half a second. He caught Suphawat completely flat-footed and surprised. The sudden burst of speed was dangerously explosive.
Suphawat panicked and tried to recover his balance, reaching his arm out to try and slap the ball away for a steal.
Tristan violently swiped Suphawat's arm away with his free hand. It was a perfectly legal, powerful swim move that threw the Thai player out of the way.
Tristan was suddenly completely alone in the painted lane, running full speed toward the basket.
The Thai center, Nattapong, saw the danger. He left his man and rotated to the middle of the paint. He jumped up as high as he could, raising both arms like a wall to block the shot.
Tristan did not pass the ball to Manio. He did not shoot a soft, floating jump shot to avoid getting hit.
He gathered the ball with both hands, planted his two feet hard into the floor, and jumped straight up into the air.
He flew right into the Thai center's chest. He completely absorbed the heavy physical contact. He did not fall backward. He used his massive core strength to push straight through the defender's body in mid-air.
BANG.
Tristan slammed the basketball through the rim with one single, violent hand. The dunk was so powerful it shook the entire heavy basketball hoop stand. Nattapong fell backward onto the hard floor.
Tristan did not hang on the rim to show off. He landed softly on his feet. He turned around and simply stared coldly into the completely silent section of the Thai crowd sitting right behind the basket.
THA: 5 - PHI: 2
"Get back on defense right now!" Tristan roared loudly at his shocked teammates, snapping them completely out of their nervous trance.
The next five minutes of the basketball game turned into a brutal, beautiful war between two completely different styles of playing.
The Thailand team played like crackling lightning. Suphawat was absolutely everywhere at once. He was throwing crazy, behind-the-back passes to his friends. He was hitting soft, high floaters over the giant Philippine centers. He was throwing his body onto the hard floor, diving dangerously just to grab loose basketballs.
The Philippines team played like a heavy, giant iron sledgehammer.
Tristan passed the ball slowly and carefully to Gab in the high post area. Gab turned and hit a simple, boring jump shot.
Tristan patiently waited for Marco to run around a heavy screen. He threw a perfect chest pass to Marco. Marco caught it and hit a perfect three-pointer.
But even though the Philippines were scoring, they could not pull away and take the lead. The Thailand team was playing with magic. They were making 60% of all their shots because their bodies were fueled by the crazy, wild adrenaline of the screaming crowd.
Score: THA 18 - PHI 16
Suphawat had the ball in his hands again. He was having a fantastic game. He already had 8 points and 3 assists, and the first quarter was not even finished yet.
He waved his hand and called for his big man to set a screen.
Tristan fought incredibly hard to push over the screen, but he got stuck for a second.
Because of the team rules, Josh Manio was forced to switch his man. Now, the giant, seven-foot-tall center was guarding the lightning-fast, six-foot-tall point guard far away from the basket.
It was a terrible mismatch. Speed against Size.
The crowd noticed instantly. They cheered wildly. "Break his ankles! Break him!" they chanted in Thai.
Suphawat smiled. He started to dance with the ball again. He dribbled left, then right, then between his legs. He was trying to make the giant center dizzy.
But Manio remembered Coach Baldomero's strict rule. Do not reach. Stay vertical. Manio bent his knees super low to the ground. He kept his extremely long arms stretched out wide to take away space.
Suphawat decided to attack. He drove hard to the right side. Manio was surprisingly quick for a giant; he slid his heavy feet quickly and cut off the path.
Suphawat spun backward quickly to the left. Manio was right there waiting for him again.
Suphawat's eyes opened wide. He looked genuinely surprised. Wow, this giant tree can actually move his feet, Suphawat thought.
Feeling a little bit frustrated because he was wasting time, Suphawat decided to just shoot over the big man. He did a quick step-back move and jumped up to shoot a jumper.
At that exact moment, Manio launched his giant body forward into the air.
BLOCK.
Manio's huge hand smacked the basketball right out of the air before it even left Suphawat's fingertips. The ball flew backward.
Tristan ran fast and grabbed the loose ball off the floor.
It was a transition fast-break opportunity.
Tristan pushed the ball down the court as fast as he could run. He looked up and saw his teammate, Joco Palencia, running hard on the right wing.
But Suphawat was super fast. The Thai boy was already running right beside Tristan, chasing him down like a cheetah.
Tristan looked directly at Joco. Tristan picked the ball up with two hands, winding up his arms to throw a powerful pass to the right side.
Suphawat saw Tristan's eyes. Suphawat instantly jumped high into the passing lane to intercept the ball and steal it.
But it was a completely fake pass.
Tristan never let go of the ball. He held it tightly in his hands, let Suphawat fly completely past him in the air, and then calmly stepped forward into a wide-open space at the top of the three-point line.
He shot the ball with perfect rhythm.
Swish.
THA: 18 - PHI: 19
It was the very first lead of the game for the Philippines.
For one tiny, split second, the giant, screaming stadium went completely, deadly quiet.
Over on the sideline, Coach Baldomero held both of his hands high in the air. He smashed his two fists tightly together.
This was the secret hand signal for the defensive play called "The Vice." This was the exact trap they had talked about in their hotel room.
On the next Thai possession, Suphawat slowly brought the ball up the court. He looked a little bit tired.
The exact second Suphawat crossed the half-court line, Tristan and Joco Palencia suddenly rushed at him from both sides. They abandoned their normal defensive spots and converged on the Thai star.
It was a hard, aggressive double-team trap.
They used their large bodies to corner him near the sideline boundary. Suphawat tried to dribble between them to split the trap, but Tristan forcefully bumped him backward with his heavy chest. Joco aggressively swiped his hands at the basketball, making Suphawat protect it.
Suphawat was completely trapped. He had nowhere to run, and he could not dribble. For the very first time in the game, the Thai prince panicked.
Desperate to get rid of the ball, Suphawat jumped into the air and threw a blind, weak pass toward the far corner of the court.
Marco Gumaba had been reading Suphawat's eyes the whole time. Marco anticipated the pass perfectly. He jumped forward and grabbed the ball out of the air.
Steal.
Marco quickly tapped the ball over to Tristan.
The crowd expected the Philippines to run a fast break and score quickly. But Tristan did not run. He intentionally slowed his feet down to a walking pace.
Tristan slowly dribbled the ball to the top of the key. He just stood there, bouncing the ball, waiting patiently for all of his teammates to run down the court and get into their proper, boring, structured positions.
Tristan looked right at Suphawat. The Thai boy was leaning over slightly, breathing very hard through his mouth.
"Are you feeling tired yet?" Tristan asked him softly, his voice perfectly calm.
Suphawat stood up straight and glared angrily at Tristan. "That was just a lucky trap, big guy."
"It is never luck," Tristan said coldly. "It is just simple geometry."
Tristan held up his hand and called for Manio to come set a pick and roll.
They ran the exact same, boring play they always ran.
But this time, because the Thai defense was absolutely terrified of Tristan driving and dunking again, two defenders rushed over to stop Tristan.
Because two men were guarding Tristan, the giant Manio was left completely alone rolling toward the basket.
Tristan threw a perfectly placed, high lob pass into the air near the rim.
Josh Manio jumped up, caught the heavy ball with both hands high above the square, and slammed it through the net.
SLAM.
THA: 18 - PHI: 21
The Thai head coach immediately called for a timeout. He looked panicked. The massive crowd tried to rally and support their team, banging their drums even louder than before.
But the invisible momentum of the game had completely shifted. The wild, chaotic "Red Sea" of Thailand was finally crashing against the unbreakable "Blue Wall" of the Philippines.
When the game resumed after the timeout, Thailand tried to calm down and run a memorized set play. They set a double screen for their best shooter, Kittipong.
But Marco Gumaba refused to let it happen. Marco chased Kittipong relentlessly around the court, fighting through every screen, completely denying him the chance to even catch the basketball.
Because their main play was ruined, Thailand was forced to pass the ball to their power forward, Chaiwat.
Chaiwat was a strong rebounder, but he was not a creator. He did not know how to dribble well. He fumbled clumsily with the ball, looking for someone to pass to.
The shot clock ticked down fast. 4... 3...
Panicking, Chaiwat chucked up a terrible, desperate prayer of a shot from twenty feet away.
It missed everything. Airball.
Tristan easily caught the falling ball right under his own basket. There were only 5 seconds left on the giant game clock for the entire first quarter.
"Go! Push it right now!" Coach Baldomero shouted loudly from the sideline.
Tristan sprinted as fast as he could.
3 seconds left. He crossed the half-court line.
2 seconds left. Suphawat ran up and aggressively picked him up at the three-point line, ready to block a final shot.
1 second left.
Tristan did not try to shoot a crazy hero shot. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw heavy Gab Lagman trailing behind the play, running hard toward the basket.
Without even looking, Tristan dropped a perfect, sharp bounce pass right between his own legs. The ball bounced perfectly into Gab's waiting hands.
Gab took one giant, heavy step forward and laid the ball gently off the glass and into the net at the exact moment the red lights on the backboard flashed.
BZZZZT.
The loud buzzer sounded to end the first quarter.
End of First Quarter Score:
THA: 18 - PHI: 23
The Philippine team slowly walked over to their wooden bench. They were not smiling, and they were not celebrating their buzzer-beater shot. They were gasping heavily for air. The pace of the first ten minutes had been incredibly fast and completely exhausting.
Tristan sat down heavily on a plastic chair. He used a white towel to wipe the stinging sweat out of his dark eyes.
[System Stat: Current Physical Stamina - 82%]
[System Stat: Ego Meter - Rapidly Rising]
"You boys did a good job," Coach Baldomero said. He handed Tristan a cold, plastic water bottle. "You survived their very best, most dangerous storm. Now, I want you to look over at their bench."
Tristan took a long drink of water and looked across the bright court.
The Thai players were not sitting down and resting. They were standing up and arguing loudly with each other. Suphawat was waving his arms wildly and yelling at his center, Nattapong, clearly very angry about the missed defensive rotation on the final play of the quarter. All of their happy smiles were completely gone. The fun dancing had stopped entirely.
"They are a team that relies entirely on good vibes and happy emotions," Baldomero sneered, a cruel look on his face. "When they are happy, they are dangerous. But we rely on cold structure. The longer this basketball game goes on, the heavier the water will become for them. Just keep grinding them down into the dirt."
Joco Palencia sat down in the chair right next to Tristan.
"Man, that fake pass you threw on the fast break was incredibly nasty," Palencia admitted, breathing hard and drinking his water. "I honestly thought you were actually going to pass the ball to me."
"I was going to pass it to you," Tristan lied incredibly smoothly, not even blinking. "Suphawat just got in the way, so I had to shoot it."
Palencia laughed loudly, relaxing a little bit. "Yeah, whatever you say, Captain. We are up by 5 points right now. But we have to be careful. Suphawat is extremely dangerous. He scored 10 points all by himself in just that one quarter."
"Yes, but he had to work incredibly hard for every single one of those ten points," Gab Lagman interjected from the other side. Gab was rubbing his thick legs with a towel. "Look at him over there. He is breathing very heavy through his mouth. We are slowly wearing his body down."
The loud horn sounded in the stadium. It was the warning buzzer for the start of the second quarter.
Tristan stood up from his chair. He looked up at the giant electronic scoreboard hanging from the ceiling.
23 - 18.
It was not enough. A five-point lead was nothing against a team that could shoot three-pointers like Thailand.
He looked around the stadium at the massive Thai crowd. They were still cheering loudly, but the tone of their voices had changed. There was a clear note of fear and anxiety in their cheers now. They had just watched the giant boys from the Philippines take Thailand's absolute best, hardest punch right to the jaw, and the Filipinos were still standing strong.
Tristan walked slowly back onto the wooden court.
He looked across the center line and caught Suphawat's eye.
The Thai Ace was definitely not smiling anymore. His face was red. He looked incredibly angry.
Good, Tristan thought coldly in his mind. When you play with anger, your mind gets cloudy. Anger makes you sloppy and weak.
"Quarter two begins now," Tristan whispered quietly to himself as he bent his knees to play defense. "It is time to slowly tighten the noose."
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