Crossover: Court of Dreams
Episode Arc: Crossover: Court of Dreams
The sound of shoes on polished wood fills an empty gym as Kenji Ezawa lines up alone at the free throw line. Sweat rolls off his chin, splattering on the basketball below. Eighteen… nineteen… how many hours had he practiced that shot now? His dream: become starting point guard for Minamizawa High’s boys’ basketball team and answer his older brother, Yuuto, on the same court. They hadn’t spoken in months after that explosive fight. Was winning a game enough to reconnect?
“Oi, Kenji! Still not home?” Ayaka calls as she looms in the doorway. Tall for her age, scrappy, wearing extra-large sweatbands on both wrists, she has been his best friend since kindergarten. “I thought I’d find your ghost here.” She tosses a bottle of water, and Kenji fumbles the catch. Silent for a beat, he asks, “Do you think it’s dumb to chase after your hero?” Ayaka shrugs, spinning a ball on fingertip. “Guess it depends on who you plan to surpass—your brother or yourself?”
Can you recall the last time someone asked you a simple question that threw your world off? Kenji feels Ayaka’s words sting under his ribs, like the time he lost the city tournament on a missed layup. She nods toward the display at the far wall—the flag for second-place finish.
Next day at school, whispers crash around the team like thunder. Minamizawa will have an open scrimmage—pros out of retirement join students for one-week mentorship, all before the midterm showdown. Taichi, tall and soft-spoken, shoots daggers of envy at Kenji during practice. “Coach says you’ll get more touches in the offense. Good for you, Ezawa. Maybe you’ll find your real skill: riding the bench.” Kenji could fire back, but he just bites down and keeps moving.
That night, Yuuto’s poster for the 2022 Nationals leans crooked over Kenji’s desk. Every cut, every call-out from teammates after the fight with Yuuto flashes in his head when he touches it. “Is this still your path, Kenji? Or are you lost too?”
The city gym strobes with excitement when the pros walk in. There’s Yoshinaga-senshu, called the ‘Demon Guard’ for shutting down all-star shooters. The entire club lines up in shining kits, sneakers squeaking in anxious beats. You remember those butterflies before a game, right?
“I hope you’re ready. Pros play rough,” Taichi mutters. Kenji’s chest thuds heavy. But Ayaka pipes up, nudging Kenji’s shoulder. “Coach says you run pick and roll with Yoshinaga. Time to hold that promise—you want your chance or not?” Am I gonna step up or fold again?

Scrimmage bell rings. First half, Kenji blends in, feeding the ball and ducking from breaks. Pros hammer shots home, make wily steals, move with sharp easy steps. Then Yoshinaga’s pass cuts through the defense—unexpected, bold. Kenji freezes, palms close. Ball bounces into his hands, defender closing.
He stutters—but tightens his grip and swings up a no-look assist to Ayaka, who snaps it in. Stadium crowd gasps, and Kenji’s pulse races. A real play, noticed—even praised, through low, approving grunt. Did it matter the play worked at all, or was it the moment Kenji took charge?
Halftime looms fast, score too close. Coach draws up green marker arrows. “Kenji, it’s yours: ignition drive, top of the key. Ride with Yoshinaga. No second guess—see it, go!” Easy, right? Hearts never pound slow at times like this. But this time Ayaka winks. “Forward is your only direction now. You avoid yourself, you’ll always stall out.”
Kenji sets at the arc, crowd buzzing. Eyes close—then open to find Yuuto’s figure, somewhere near the door, arms crossed. That sharp pain from the fight returns, but pushes him forward. What would you do if the person who meant most watched your test right then?

Whistle shrills: drive, stutter, fake left. He’s in. Crossover. Paint opens for a flash. Pass or push? Taichi lunges in defense. Kenji yells out, “Ayaka, now!” Fast cut back, pocket bounce. Ayaka rises for three. Rim shakes—ball slides through. Crowd erupts. Kenji’s almost in shock—the combo he sketched so many nights just finally landed, in front of someone who matters.
The timer winds down. Only seconds left. Possession cycles to Kenji one last time, but Taichi merciless, rakes the ball away. Ref declares foul—one last shot for Kenji to carry the match against the pros. The echo in the gym tightens with every quick breath. Could you hear a one-word thought so loud it drowns even fear? Kenji’s eyes don’t meet Yuuto’s, only the rim. Then: release—soft flick, clean arc.

Scene shifts—the scoreboard stuns: Minamizawa—victors over the record-holding ex-pros. Crowd in shock, team in bliss. Yet just beyond the celebrating mass, Yuuto waits, his usual impossible-to-read stare. Small smile cracks in the corner of his mouth. Will brother finally speak to brother?
Cut to Kenji, hair matted, breathing out slow. Yoshinaga slaps him on the back. “You played like someone looking for more than a basket. Hold on to that—or you’ll always chase shadows.” Ball bounces to the sideline. Kenji looks up and out at where his brother waits. Does the game really end here?
Episodic cliffhanger. Coaches review tape and hint at national scouts attending next game. And as Kenji moves to meet Yuuto’s eyes, the screen fades out—a muffled ‘Oi!’ can be heard from off court, and a ripple of excitement grows: Yuuto has finally come onto the floor. Will apology close the old wound, or will the rivalry truly start now?
