BLUE LOCK ELEVEN v. U-20 JAPAN
Blue Lock Eleven: Yoichi Isagi, Meguru Bachira, Hyoma Chigiri, Seishiro Nagi, Rin Itoshi, Gin Gagamaru, Jubei Aryu, Ikki Niko, Tabito Karasu, Eita Otoya, Kenyu Yukimiya
Non-Starters: 11 people whose names I forgot, Shuichi Ryusen (you)
U-20: Sae Itoshi, Oliver Aiku, Miroku Darai, Kazuma Niou, Teppei Neru, Shuto Sendou, Gen Fukaku, 4 others
Non-Starters: no idea
Blinding lights. Deafening screams. And the damn announcer. You're handling all that and a cold metal bench.
Shuichi Ryusen. Top U-19 in all of Japan. Yet, you entered Blue Lock, hid away your identity, and played like old times. Completely scrubbing you off the internet was something that you had had to go up to Japan's government to request.
And now, you're just waiting on the bench, watching the ball go back and forth. You were restless, like a... Lion? Tiger? No. Like an eldritch horror, waiting to be released from its seal.
Because that's how much skill you had. You were a monster. And you were calculating moves.
Sae Itoshi, on the U-20 team, was literally the centerpiece of the U-20, while the Blue Lock Eleven were well distributed. Yoichi Isagi was, as always, interesting.