Chapter 99 :Told You I’d reak You - Basketball Soul System: I Got Westbrook's MVP Powers in Another World! - NovelsTime

Basketball Soul System: I Got Westbrook's MVP Powers in Another World!

Chapter 99 :Told You I’d reak You

Author: Ken_Wong_1299
updatedAt: 2025-08-30

CHAPTER 99: CHAPTER 99 :TOLD YOU I’D REAK YOU

The second quarter ignited in Vellix City Arena, the crowd’s roar a jagged pulse through the chipped concrete stand.

Ryan jogged back onto the hardwood, his breath syncing with the rhythm of the restless crowd, the air thick with the tang of sweat and the buzz of a restless city, his sneakers squeaking on the scuffed floor. The Roarers clung to a 28-26 lead, but Ryan’s 0-for-4 first quarter left a bitter sting. On the Phantoms’ side, Devin Maddox lounged on the bench, his number 10 jersey a taunting beacon, dreads spilling over a towel as he grinned like he’d already won. Ryan’s jaw tightened.

Not today, clown.

Two minutes in, Ryan found his groove. He caught a pass from Darius, his hands steady despite the cold start, faked left, and sliced through the paint past a scrambling Phantoms guard. He floated a layup, soft off the glass—finally, it dropped. The Iron City fans erupted, their blue jerseys a defiant blaze in the gray Vellix City sea.

Ryan jogged back, pounding his chest, the weight of his scoring drought lifting. Coach Crawford exhaled on the sideline, his stoic mask softening. He’d seen too many ballers crumble under a cold streak, their shots turning timid. Ryan’s fire was still lit—if he stopped shooting, the Roarers’ offense would stall, and their gritty 34-30 lead would slip.

Maddox swaggered back onto the court, his number 10 jersey clinging to his wiry frame. The guy was a pest—trash talk spilling like cheap cologne, sneaky elbows, and that infamous hip-check. His reputation preceded him, EchoTube clips of his sleazy antics racking up views across the ABA circuit.

Ryan thought he was ready, thought he could shrug it off. He was wrong.

During a Phantoms possession, Kamara drew a shooting foul, stepping to the free-throw line. Maddox sidled up to Ryan, too close, his breath hot and deliberate as he leaned in, blowing air in Ryan’s face. The move was pure provocation, a violation of every unwritten rule in basketball’s code. Ryan jerked back half a step, disgust curling his lip. Maddox’s sleazy grin widened. "You ain’t hitting double digits tonight, rookie."

Ryan’s glare could’ve burned a hole through steel. He wasn’t mad about the words—trash talk was part of the game—but that move? Nasty. "I’m gonna break you," Ryan shot back, voice low and lethal.

Kamara sank both free throws, cool as ice. The Phantoms took possession, and Maddox had the ball, sizing up the Roarers’ defense. Ryan, done playing nice, switched off their shooting guard and stepped up to guard Maddox himself. The arena’s energy spiked, fans leaning forward, sensing a streetball grudge match brewing. Maddox, a versatile small forward with a knack for ball-handling, smirked, a glint of disdain in his eyes. "Watch me torch you," he taunted, jabbing left before darting inside the arc.

Ryan stuck to him like glue, his feet sliding in perfect sync.

Maddox spun, turning his back to post up, his bulky frame a wall of muscle. Ryan, leaner despite weeks of gym work, couldn’t match the weight.

Maddox’s hips went to work, that sleazy high-arching bump pushing Ryan back step by step. The Vellix City fans hooted, loving their hometown pest’s dirty tricks. Three shoves, and Maddox was near the rim, his sweet spot.

He whirled for a fadeaway.

Ryan was ready. He leaped, left hand shooting out, timing perfect. Smack! The ball flew free, a clean block with no contact. The crowd gasped. Ryan dove, snatching the ball mid-air, then fired a no-look pass to Darius streaking downcourt. Darius soared, slamming a two-handed dunk that rattled the rim. The Roarers’ bench leaped up, hollering like they’d won a streetball bet. Maddox’s face darkened, and Ryan flashed a grin. "Told you I’d break you."

Next possession, Maddox tried again, faking a drive before pulling up for a quick jumper. Smack! Ryan’s hand met the ball in mid-air, swatting it to the floor. He sprinted past a chasing Phantoms guard, beating him to the loose ball and rising for a one-handed slam. The Roarers’ bench exploded, Kamara pumping his fist. The Iron City fans chanted Ryan’s name, their voices a raw battle cry. Maddox, fuming, his face a storm cloud, had been blocked twice in a row.

Maddox wasn’t done. On defense, he glued himself to Ryan, crowding him at the elbow. His eyes burned with defiance, desperate to reclaim his swagger. Ryan, feeling a spark, spun into a rare post-up. Maddox saw his chance, thrusting his hips forward for that signature sleazy bump. But Ryan was a step ahead, spinning again. Maddox’s force hit nothing but air, his momentum sending him stumbling forward. Ryan glided to the rim, laying it in soft and easy. The crowd groaned, the Iron City faithful chanting his name.

The scoreboard ticked on, the Roarers’ lead growing like a fire catching dry wood. Halftime hit, the Roarers up 62-52, a double-digit lead. Ryan had found his groove, going 4-for-5 in the second for 8 points, shaking off his cold start. Maddox, rattled by the blocks, hadn’t scored a point since the first. In the locker room, the air was thick with the scent of liniment and victory, the team’s energy a coiled spring, Kamara slung an arm around Ryan, grinning. "Maddox thought he had you, but you flipped the script, man."

Ryan smirked. "Just the start. Third quarter, I’m ending his confidence. He’ll be dodging me by the end."

The third quarter roared to life, the arena’s energy a live wire. The neon lights flickered, casting jagged shadows on the court, a fitting stage for the ABA’s chaos. Maddox, back on the court, got a golden chance in the paint, a clean pass setting him up for an easy dunk. But Ryan’s blocks lingered in his head. He hesitated, just a beat, and that was enough. Ryan closed the gap, leaping as Maddox rose. Smack. A third block, the ball caroming off the backboard.

The Vellix City crowd fell silent, their hometown hero unraveling before their eyes. Maddox’s shoulders slumped, his swagger fading.

On the next Phantoms possession, Maddox got open off a screen, a wide-open look from the wing. Ryan was nowhere near, but the shadow of those blocks loomed. Maddox froze, passing up the shot and dishing to a teammate who clanged a jumper. The Phantoms’ bench groaned, sensing their star’s unraveling. The Phantoms’ coach, face like a thundercloud, called a timeout with five minutes left in the third, the Roarers up 91-72. He yanked Maddox to the bench, his voice sharp. "You said you’d torch him! You gonna let a rookie make you look soft? That’s embarrassing."

Maddox sat, head bowed, eyes dull. The coach leaned in. "Cool off, watch him. He’s just a rookie. You’ve owned guys like LaVonte. Step up." Maddox’s jaw tightened, his hands gripping the bench, fighting to reignite his fire. Maddox’s fists clenched, a flicker of fire returning.

Ryan, meanwhile, took a breather on the bench, his own confidence unshaken. He sipped water, the roar of the crowd a distant hum, his mind replaying Maddox’s crumbling bravado.

When he checked back in, Maddox was waiting, striding up to him. "I’m serious now, rookie. I’m blowing you out."

Ryan grinned, unfazed. "Funny, I said I’d break you. I even sat out to wait for you to come back."

Maddox’s lip twitched, his trash talk outgunned. The Phantoms attacked, Maddox getting another shot in the paint. He tossed up a floater, no hesitation this time. Ryan jumped, fingertips grazing the ball, nudging it off course.

Clang.

It rimmed out. Malik snagged the rebound, and Ryan crouched, flashing a "too small" gesture at Maddox, who looked like he’d been punched in the gut.

Maddox’s game unraveled. He bricked shots, hesitated on open looks, his confidence shredded. Ryan, meanwhile, toyed with him on offense, using screens and hand-offs with Darius to leave Maddox spinning. Ryan drained three buckets—two pull-up jumpers and a layup—each one a dagger. The crowd felt the shift, their chants fading as Ryan owned the court. Maddox finally scored, a desperation jumper, and pounded his chest, yelling at Ryan. Ryan just laughed. "One bucket? Check the scoreboard, man."

The board told the story: Roarers 91, Phantoms 72, one minute left in the third. The Roarers’ momentum was a freight train, unstoppable, their chemistry a perfect storm. Maddox went quiet, his fire snuffed out. Early in the fourth, with the Roarers up 25, the Phantoms waved the white flag, sending in their bench. The final buzzer sounded: 122-99, Roarers, their sixth straight win.

Ryan’s stat line was modest—18 points, 6 assists, 3 rebounds—but it outshone Maddox’s 16 points, most from the first quarter.

As the game ended, Maddox bolted for the tunnel, head down, his bravado gone. In the Roarers’ locker room, the air was thick with victory, Sonique tracks blaring from a speaker, Kamara was all smiles. "You broke him, man. He’s gonna have nightmares about those blocks."

Ryan shrugged, a sly grin spreading. "Told you I’d make him fold."

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