What was expected to be a statement debut for Nxled instead became a wake-up call – and that’s precisely why its clash with Capital1 on Saturday looms as a potential early-season blockbuster in the Premier Volleyball League All-Filipino Conference.
After surviving a gritty five-set scare from Farm Fresh, the Chameleons arrive at Ynares Center knowing reputation alone won’t carry them far. Loaded with championship pedigree from the Petro Gazz pipeline, Nxled showed flashes of dominance behind Brooke Van Sickle, Myla Pablo and MJ Phillips, but also revealed vulnerabilities in rhythm, rotation and closing instincts.
That narrow escape underscored the challenge of blending elite talent into a cohesive unit – a process still very much in progress.
Capital1, meanwhile, enters with far less hype but growing belief. The Solar Spikers’ four-set win over the ZUS Coffee Thunderbelles was built not on star power alone but on clarity of roles, defensive discipline and a willingness to grind.
“We have good spikers, so we can make this connection better, so it's going to be easy for the setters. And then, of course, it's going to be easy for us,” said Solar Spikers head coach Jorge Souza de Brito.
“Of course, it's going help us to play all the competition against anyone. Stay in the receive pattern, so the setters can develop the team better. So that's why we're trying to improve right now,” he added.
Rookie standout Bella Belen didn’t just shine – she dominated. Her clutch takeover in the fourth set silenced the Thunderbelles and further cemented her status as the sport’s next big star. Backed by the immediate impact of new recruits Shaya Adorador, Ysa Jimenez and Pauline Gaston, who all delivered in a big way, the Solar Spikers suddenly look battle-ready. With confidence surging, many believe they’re now prepared to test themselves against a more celebrated opponent.
On paper, Nxled’s depth and firepower give it the edge. But on court, the margins appear thinner. Capital1’s ability to extend rallies, challenge the Chameleons’ floor defense, and capitalize on broken plays could tilt momentum.
For Nxled, the task is clear: stabilize reception, trust its rotation, and convert pressure into clean execution rather than forced heroics.
“I feel like everyone is really good and mature on the team. Everyone holds each other accountable and I really have a supportive coaching staff,” said Van Sickle.
With a share of the early lead – currently held by unbeaten Cignal – at stake, this isn’t just another early conference match. It’s a measuring stick – a chance for Nxled to prove it can translate talent into authority, and for Capital1 to announce that its strong start is no fluke.
If both teams sustain their intensity and composure, fans may be in for one of the tournament’s first true statement games.
The 4 p.m. showdown between ZUS Coffee and Galeries Tower is likewise tipped to serve as a fitting appetizer to an explosive weekend, with both teams eager to rebound from opening-game setbacks and find their early rhythm in what shapes up as a crucial battle in the race for semifinal berths.
The Thunderbelles are out to assert their physicality, cohesion and growing chemistry, banking on their ability to dictate tempo and impose their will at the net. On the other side, the Highrisers are desperate to finally settle down after another major roster overhaul – one designed to inject direction and competitiveness into a franchise long stuck on the fringes of contention.
With a revamped lineup featuring Aiza Pontillas, Erika Raagas, Erika Deloria, Shola Alvarez and Cams Victoria, Galeries Tower is determined to prove it belongs in the conversation this time around. Holdovers Julia Coronel and Jean Asis will be counted on to provide the stability and composure needed to blend new pieces into a functional unit and turn promise into performance.
Despite its setback to Capital1, ZUS Coffee still boasts a formidable lineup, led by Thea Gagate, Jovelyn Gonzaga, Chinnie Arroyo and Riza Nogales. Blending continuity with grit, the core anchors a roster determined not only to bounce back, but to prove that its runner-up finish in the Reinforced Conference was no fluke.
