"Yuuto's match rhythm is perfect."
After saying hello, Akashi stared at Yuuto on the court.
Under the gaze of the Emperor Eye, Yuuto's body had a great sense of rhythm.
The term "sense of rhythm," in his understanding, should generally appear in dancers.
To make their dance performance more graceful, dancers need to move their bodies rhythmically and regularly according to the rhythm of the music and the content of the melody to express the connotation of the music.
The best among them will have this natural rhythm in their bodies.
It is the soul of dancing.
Just as normal people can't help but move to the rhythm when they hear music they like.
Not deliberately done, not stiff, very natural, very smooth.
This was how Yuuto felt to Akashi right now.
He was in a perfect match rhythm.
This perfect rhythm would allow Yuuto to maintain a high level on both offense and defense while consuming less stamina.
Kise only knew Yuuto was strong but didn't know the specifics, so he asked, "What do you mean?"
"Meaning he completely controls his body, completing the most physically demanding tasks with the least cost, right?" Midorima understood somewhat.
Worthy of being the Gold Medal Lecturer of Kuroko no Basket; he knew everything.
"Yeah. Such a perfect rhythm also allows him to maintain a high level, and his form won't easily decline."
Akashi didn't know how Yuuto did it.
Perhaps it was related to his pragmatic basketball, or maybe he gained insights from Seiho's Lightning Run.
Anyway, the Yuuto of a year ago didn't give him this feeling.
On the court.
Aomine's offense was like a violent storm; Yuuto's ability forced him to have nowhere to go.
Corrected?
So what?
Just continue to get stronger!
He liked the feeling of being driven into a corner.
Entangling all the way from the three-point line, Yuuto forced Tōō's Ace to the baseline on the right side of the basket.
Just when everyone thought Aomine had nowhere to go.
He twisted the ball as if imparting magic to it.
The basketball drew a beautiful arc, spinning and flying past Yuuto's side.
At the same time.
Aomine circled out of bounds and returned inbounds to catch the ball.
Thus.
An incredibly imaginative pass-to-self was completed.
"Don't even think about it!" Seeing this, Tsutomu Iwamura immediately abandoned Wakamatsu and came over to help defend.
"With light of this level, step aside." Aomine jumped, ignoring Iwamura's defense. He bent his waist in mid-air to duck under Iwamura's armpit, then kicked his legs, exerted force from his waist and abdomen to rise again, circled to the other side of the hoop, and put the ball in.
Iwamura landed and sighed silently, then picked up the basketball to go to the sideline for the inbound.
"You might feel better if you treat it as being scored on by Yuuto." Ryuhei Kasuga came over to receive the ball.
"You're really bad at comforting people." Iwamura inbounded the ball.
The memory of being destroyed by Yuuto wasn't pleasant.
"But you're right. Since he's the Ace of the Generation of Miracles, he can't be judged by common sense."
Since Yuuto came to Seiho, this was only the second time he had seen someone able to fight Yuuto to this extent.
Even Shutoku's Shintaro Midorima was at an absolute disadvantage in one-on-one duels and needed to run tactics to score.
Back on the other end.
Yuuto also launched a fierce attack after receiving the ball.
This duel between aces had lasted for 5 minutes and hadn't stopped until now.
Endless miraculous shots left fans dumbfounded.
Yuuto's body bloomed with golden light, his cold face majestic without anger.
"So amazing. This is the Lion of Okushirazome and the Ace of the Generation of Miracles."
People whispered; this scene was too intense.
More intense than the battle against Shutoku.
Of course, this was from the perspective of ordinary fans.
Some who knew the game understood that the match between Seiho and Shutoku was equally intense.
It was just that against Shutoku, it was a clash of tactics and psychology.
But against Tōō, this match was a direct dialogue between two aces.
This was a pure contest of numerical values.
"Who do you guys think will win if this goes on?"
"I think Yuuto is more formidable; he looks more at ease."
"Why do I feel Aomine is stronger? His dribbling and scoring are simply incredible."
People couldn't see the situation clearly for now.
The duel between Tōō and Seiho was as anxious as the score looked.
"Super goals are certainly wonderful, but winning games relies more on easy points like open shots and layups."
Masaaki Nakatani was mixed in the audience.
Aomine's performance was wonderful; he had nothing to say about his individual ability and talent.
But he still believed that simpler scoring was the most important factor in winning games.
If a team scores 100 points in a game, then 80 of those points are obtained through ordinary scoring; miraculous shots can account for at most 20%.
"...Not necessarily. That kid from Tōō can't be viewed with ordinary eyes," Kagetora Aida said from the side.
Under normal circumstances, it was indeed as Nakatani said.
But Aomine Daiki wasn't an ordinary player.
He could contribute such super goals in every round.
"You haven't experienced it, so you won't understand." Nakatani looked calmly at Yuuto and said, "This kid, his evolution speed is beyond imagination. He will only get stronger."
As players' stamina drops, a decline in form is inevitable.
The high rate of upsets in back-to-back professional games is due to insufficient stamina.
Many strong teams don't have a winning rate exceeding 50% in back-to-back games.
Like the Rockets.
Their average score in back-to-back games was 106.9 points with a shooting percentage of 43%.
But when they had 48 hours or more of ample rest, their average score could rise to 119.6 points, and their shooting percentage rose to 46.8%.
This is the difference.
However, Yuuto.
He defied this law. In the match against Seiho (Shutoku?), even in the second half, his offensive and defensive efficiency was actually higher.
All of this benefited from his unparalleled analytical and adjustment capabilities.
Which is the "Weakness Revision" talent mentioned by his disciple Midorima.
Such a talent is historically rare.
In fact.
In the latter half of the first quarter, Yuuto's scoring indeed began to gradually become easier, and the defensive pressure on Aomine became greater.
3 minutes and 34 seconds.
Yuuto pierced toward Tōō's formation like a golden light, but he retreated even faster than he advanced.
With a double step-back, he returned to the three-point line and sank a three-pointer decisively.
Aomine reacted just a tiny bit slowly and was seized upon by Yuuto.
And he knew.
This tiny bit was hard to catch up to.
This was proof that Yuuto had completed another evolution.
...
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