
Why are you the only one running away, just nibbling on the tasty parts?
Why do you think that is?
“I really like things like red bean paste, haha.”
>>1
That’s a different female knight.
The more accomplished someone is during their active years, the less they end up getting burned.
Because my feelings for my son have won, it is even more beautiful.
I don’t understand the reason for the criticism, even though I didn’t step into Ayase River’s life.
I did my best as a human.
If the director had offered his son as a sacrifice, everyone would have been happy.
They say I bit into something delicious, but it’s just that I held a responsible position where I was entrusted with the delicacies of various places, not just Ayase River, for a time!
It’s not like I rose to success just because of Ayase River, so isn’t it fine?
Choosing a lesser relative over a promising player is normally considered a bad move, but this manga shows us an example of a reader who has fallen into that trap…
A is definitely in the wrong, isn’t it…
Director Namiki’s baseball school… Apparently, there are normal pitchers there.
It’s not like being the coach of the U12 team and becoming number one in the world would have any impact on this person’s career at all.
Even if I had a feast dangled in front of me (no… if I bite into this, it might affect my son’s future…), I barely nibbled on it, right?
It’s right as a parent…
If it were Dad Yasupapa, he would have enrolled me in a baseball academy.
Everyone enjoyed playing the role of the diamond mentor and then ran away after doing it.
I think this person will do it properly, but even so, I feel like I can’t keep my son, who has consulted with me to improve, close by.
A position where I have raised capable individuals for a lifetime.
This child’s victory-first principle is influenced too much by this person, especially in scenes where they appear together with Aya.
Just snacking wasn’t enough, so I’ve turned it into content for YouTube, which is quite malicious.
Throw your life away like Yasupapa.
If he had gone so far as to kill Namiki’s son, he probably wouldn’t have been able to become the strongest pitcher who wouldn’t let anyone score, so in the end, it was good that he couldn’t get into the baseball training school.
It’s probably because you responded sincerely as an athlete, unlike other adults, that your presence remains strongly in Aya’s mind.
Everyone, including the U12’s coach and coaches, had common sense…
Even if the Bambi’s director denies that he is being interviewed, he can put on a facade of adulthood at that moment, but Ayane will see right through it in this manga.
I thought it was strange to decline with a reason that would be easily seen through when there was a whole night to come up with excuses, but on the contrary, it made me feel good that it wasn’t just an excuse to refuse; they were truly struggling with whether to choose Ayasegawa or not.
It’s scary how some people, who seem to genuinely feel dissatisfied, have a baseball mindset even in reality, despite making what are ordinary and correct judgments as human beings.
They say it’s about the baseball world, but as the head of a baseball academy, it’s appropriate since I’m looking after not only my own son but also other kids.
Look at this phoenix.
It’s a story about enjoying talent as if it’s a judgment of being a good person based on whether you can or cannot get into a cram school…
“Isn’t it because you didn’t run away there that you’re here now?” The beauty of the coaching scenes in the U12 arc was interesting, but the Adachi arc lacks any coaching scenes, which feels a bit unsatisfying.
In the first place, I wouldn’t entrust the U12 coach position to someone whose mind has been burned out and driven mad by exceptional talent.
It was still dangerous, though.
Looking back now, it might have been a clever maneuver by the Bambees’ manager to maximize his own satisfaction as the manager of a playful team.
Yasupapa was also quite at the top during his active days.
Compared to the thread image, it just feels like a trifling thing that can’t let go of lingering attachments and is projecting them onto the son…
A crappy dad who had sex all the time without any intention of taking responsibility.
I think the coach of the Bambees did everything possible as the coach of a weak team.
You probably don’t have any reliable connections to count on.
A, who has no intention of entering the baseball school, is a loser who has dyed it according to his own taste.
That person was truly a pitiful individual whose brain would have been fried without me.
Since I said it, I’ve really become a loser.
Yasu Papa is making excuses if he’s forcing his elementary school son to take extracurricular lessons!
The conversation with director Bambi is too scary with the word “correction.”
I think that’s the correct way to approach Ayase River, as shown in the image.
Since Ayasegawa can switch between multiple pitching forms with equivalent performance without much practice, it’s enough to just teach him the theory.
If you keep looking at the pros and cons, you will become a headache.
I just showed A a video of a slightly lewd play to educate them!
The conversation changes if you did the same thing with yen.
It’s not funny that all the classmates of the Bambees are gone, but I couldn’t help but laugh.
I’m an esper, but if this person were to join the Ayase River Baseball School, I think they would be treated like Yasupapa No. 2.
I think the coach’s son probably didn’t go crazy because he’s a pitcher of the same generation as the crazy catcher.
I think the pitcher at the cram school is going crazy.
If you don’t let me join the Ayase River tutoring, I might quit baseball… that’s the kind of thing that’s been forgotten, right?
The scene in the thread image really looked like it took the most delicious part of Ayase River and left the rest to Adachi Phoenix.
Aya was causing further strange complications, so even without the representative coach, the hassle had increased by about three times.
Director Bambi is too powerful of a character for someone who possesses the traits of a baseball player while also having the ability to control children.
I was surprised to find that time had flown by and the catcher was a kid I didn’t know when I read the latest issue.
Who taught A to this extent… I couldn’t help but laugh at the panel where the thread image is explaining it.
It’s quite rare to see a youth baseball manga where the adults around are discussed for their successes or failures.
It seems like this person themselves is a great player, so my desire to nurture them doesn’t seem very strong.
Is there a reason why they deliberately didn’t show the new catcher much last year?
While the other two main classmates were described quite a bit,
Mayo-san and Ureshi-san have both retired before I knew it.
I don’t understand little league baseball at all, so I don’t know if it will come up again in the future or if it’s already over.
The director’s son may not know the age difference, but in the end, sooner or later, he’s going to get beaten up by A, right?
I can get through high school baseball without damaging my shoulder or elbow, but I wonder how it will end.
Was it just that I was raised to a higher grade?
So when the director said something like, “Let’s quickly elevate Aya,” Ureshi-san thought, “Six months? That means Aya can be used for a long time.”
Ayaka said “as short as possible” so as not to disturb Mayu-san.
A guy who enjoys his body to the fullest and then throws it away, an adulterer.
What if I end up beating and driving them crazy at the tournament… that’s just Ayaka’s unwarranted worry.
In reality, that unfounded worry causes allies to go mad.
It’s a way of enjoying it that’s somewhat femme fatale.
There are quite a few people who won’t be satisfied unless Ayaka burns everything and drives everyone crazy.
Aya is a flashbang; if you look directly at it, you’ll be hurt.
However, Mayoko-san is kind; sometimes she even seems silly.