Creamline seeks to extend its early surge but braces for a resurgent Capital1 side in what promises to be another unpredictable showdown in the Premier Volleyball League All-Filipino Conference preliminaries Saturday at the FilOil Playtime Centre.
With Farm Fresh colliding with ZUS Coffee in the nightcap, the twin bill could serve as another reminder that in this conference, nothing comes easy – and no lead is ever safe.
Three weeks into the season-ending tournament organized by Sports Vision, the narrative has shifted from powerhouse dominance to weekly uncertainty. Galeries Tower’s stunning four-set reversal of erstwhile unbeaten Nxled underscored the league’s growing parity. Reputation, on-paper talent, and early momentum have offered no guarantees in a conference that continues to defy predictions.
Creamline knows this all too well.
After being shut down by PLDT in its opener, the Cool Smashers responded with four-set victories over Choco Mucho and ZUS Coffee. Coach Sherwin Meneses has gradually blended experience with returning firepower, creating a lineup that appears to be peaking – but remains wary of the tournament’s volatile nature.
Bernadette Pons, back from national team duties, has reignited Creamline’s attack, leading the scoring in three games. Jema Galanza and Tots Carlos have rediscovered their rhythm, while Pangs Panaga and Bea de Leon continue to anchor the middle with authority. Behind them, Jia De Guzman orchestrates with trademark precision.
Yet even with that arsenal, Creamline enters its 4 p.m. duel with Capital1 knowing that control in this conference is an illusion.
Capital1, bannered by rising star Bella Belen, is equally determined to sustain its climb. The Solar Spikers are coming off a gritty five-set triumph over the Flying Titans, highlighted by Belen’s explosive 29-point career-high performance – a statement that she can take over matches at any given moment.
Containing the league’s leading scorer will be Creamline’s top priority. Panaga and De Leon will be tasked to fortify the net, while Michele Gumabao, Lorie Bernardo, Carlos, and Galanza must provide support on both ends. But neutralizing Belen requires more than blocks – it demands disciplined floor defense against her heavy swings from the wings and her equally lethal back-row attacks.
“Syempre excited. Knowing Bella, talagang very competitive din. Pero siguro hindi namin hayaan ma-control ni Bella yung laro. Balik muna kami sa ensayo tomorrow then tignan namin kung san kami may advantage sa Capital1 and magandang laban yun. Excited makakalaban namin si Bella,” said Meneses, who won a championship with Belen in the UAAP.
Still, unpredictability cuts both ways.
Setters Jasmine Nabor and Iris Tolenada have multiple offensive options in Shaya Adorador, France Ronquillo, Lella Cruz, Ezra Madrigal, Pauline Gaston, Cherry Nunag, and the fiery Ypril Tapia. If Creamline keys too heavily on Belen, Capital1 has the depth to make them pay.
And in a conference where upsets have become routine, depth often spells the difference.
The 6:30 p.m. clash between Farm Fresh and ZUS Coffee carries similar intrigue. Both squads are desperate for traction in a standings race that has grown increasingly congested.
The Foxies snapped a two-game slide with a dominant sweep of the Highrisers – the most lopsided win of the conference so far, 25-14, 25-15, 25-12 – signaling their intent to rejoin the conversation.
ZUS Coffee, meanwhile, is searching for consistency after absorbing a four-set defeat to Creamline. The Thunderbelles own just one win – a five-set escape over Akari – and need to rediscover the form that carried the Thunderbelles to a runner-up finish in the Reinforced Conference.
Chinnie Arroyo poured in 18 points in a losing effort against the Cool Smashers, while Thea Gagate, Fiola Ceballos, and Riza Nogales provided support. But late-game poise remains a concern.
Farm Fresh counters with the steady production of Trisha Tubu, though the Foxies will need stronger contributions from Ces Molina, Jolina Dela Cruz, Rizza Cruz, Riri Meneses, Royse Tubino, and Mylene Paat against a Thunderbelles side expected to come out swinging.
If the first three weeks have proven anything, it’s this: momentum is fleeting, reputations are fragile, and every match demands full throttle from first serve to final point.
In a conference defined by surprises, Saturday’s double-header may be just another chapter in a season where predictability has become the rarest commodity of all.
