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Rina Matsui, though finishing first, approached Haruka after the race. “You were amazing,” she said, offering a respectful nod. “Your technique… it reminded me of that scene from the show where Maki turned the tide. Keep swimming.”
Now, a decade after Maki’s final televised race, Haruka found herself at the brink of her own story. The announcement came on a rainy Tuesday. The Shimizu Swimming Club, a modest but proud organization, had hired a new head coach: Kaito Saito , a former Olympic silver‑medalist turned mentor. Kaito’s reputation was built on a blend of strict discipline and an uncanny ability to coax hidden potential from his swimmers. His arrival was accompanied by a flurry of rumors—some said he’d be the one to finally push the club into the national championships; others whispered that his past with Maki Hojo was more than professional. -FSET-189- Maki Hojo Swimming Class -Censored-
Kaito, ever the strategist, used the rivalry to fuel the team’s motivation. He assigned each swimmer a “rival role,” encouraging them to study Rina’s techniques and then devise a counter‑strategy. For Haruda, the goal was to perfect her underwater pullout, a maneuver Maki had famously refined to gain an edge in the 200‑meter butterfly. Rina Matsui, though finishing first, approached Haruka after
When the credits rolled, the restaurant fell silent. Haruka felt tears prick her eyes; she realized that the drama’s true power lay not in the trophies, but in the way it made ordinary people believe in extraordinary possibilities. Keep swimming
The announcer’s voice boomed: “Ladies and gentlemen, the 200‑meter butterfly, final heat!”
An original fan‑drama inspired by the spirit of the Japanese series “FSET‑189 Maki Hojo Swimming.” The early morning sun filtered through the glass of the municipal pool in Shimizu, painting the water in gold. The sound of splashing, the rhythmic thump of feet against the lane ropes, and the soft murmur of a distant crowd formed a familiar chorus. For twenty‑seven‑year‑old Haruka Tanaka , the pool was more than a place to train—it was the stage where she first fell in love with the sport that had defined her life.