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The Birth of A Volleyball Legend

2011. That was when earthquake and tsunami hit Japan, changing thousands of lives. And Kobayashi Yuki is just one of them. A month ago, he was just a normal boy, graduating from a small middle school in Fukushima and was excited to go to the high school. However, the disaster changed his life. He lost both parents, not because they died, but because they were still missing until now. He lost his home. He lost his friends. He lost his school. He lost everything. Having no choice, he moved to Tokyo, to a small, new orphanage to accommodate victims of the disaster who didn't have any home or wanted to change their lives in the biggest city in Japan. In his mind, all he wanted to do was enter a normal high school, do a part-time job, make some money to help the orphanage, and maybe if he were lucky enough he could be admitted into a good university with a scholarship. However, one challenge from the volleyball team and one half-Italian blonde boy turned everything upside down. Now, he was trapped inside the crazy team, being dragged into the mess. Inter-High. National Tournament. Volleyball. Those three words kept spinning around his life as he entered a crazy high school life. Can he strive in the place where he was unfamiliar with? Would he be a good volleyball player? And what does the future hold for him?

lank_0z · Olahraga
Peringkat tidak cukup
286 Chs

As The Game Goes By

Akira furrowed his brows, disliking how the game spiraled out of control. He remembered how excited he was a moment ago when Yuki and Hirano could move in sync on the front line, just to be slapped on his face when Haruo suddenly joined Kyoei's offense to deal with this sudden change. Now, the game entered some kind of weird state where Haruo, the opponent's middle blocker became their strongest hitter while Yuki, his strongest defensive player, tried his best to block Haruo's attack.

He glanced sideways at the only player on the bench, racking his brain on how to use him properly.

'If Yuki joined the front line with Hirano, Asa's presence would only hinder them both, as he couldn't match their reaction speed. And while as a left-handed hitter, he could be a completely different threat to the opponent, Asa himself is never a good offensive player. Maybe, putting back Ogawa on the court will do the job.'