The four boys were taking off their sweats and stretching out on the bleachers. The game before theirs had just ended. Matt, Will, Jason, and Cory hurried out onto the court and began warm-up drills.
The announcer behind the scoreboard picked up the microphone. “Each team must have three players and one alternate. Ten-minute halves. Running clock. No timeouts.”
It would be two short games and then the championship. Only three players, no subbing in and out. The alternate was there only in case something went wrong. Jason would never get to play.
It’s just one tournament, Cory thought. There will be plenty of others.
The horn sounded, the clock started, and their game began.
No time to feel bad.
The other team was good. At halftime, it was a tied score. Matt, Will, and Cory were playing well. They pulled ahead in the final minutes, and the game ended 34-32.
Jason stood up and cheered the whole time. The second game was an easy win, 54-34. Again, Jason rooted for them from the bench. His cheering made Cory feel even worse.
“I’m going to fill up my water bottle,” Cory told his dad.
“OK, but I want you back here to watch this next team play. They’re the ones to beat if we want to win the championship.”
The other team was legendary. They had one kid with a highlight tape on YouTube. Another player was so tall that he looked like he could dunk without jumping. It would be a tough game—even if Jason were playing. Which he should be.