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My thoughts on the
first round Ateneo-La Salle women’s volleyball match
by rick olivares
Heading into Sunday’s end of the first match between
Ateneo and La Salle, I had three thoughts:
1. Would the Ateneo Lady Eagles have the strength and
legs to go up against the tough La Salle Lady Spikers after having played
against the UE Lady Warriors one day before?
2. I felt the Lady Spikers were looking more towards
this match than any other to see where they are at and to gain a measure of
advantage and revenge.
3. How would Ateneo rookie Bea De Leon stand up to a
frontline that still has elements that put the fear of the volleyball gods into
opposing teams?
After the playoff-finals atmosphere of the five-set
win by Lady Eagles, here are my observations:
The first set was a getting-to-know-you-once-more
affair where each side took the measure of the other. I thought that the errors
on Ateneo’s side were to be expected after having played the day before. They
didn’t look sharp and played in spurts. Later, as much as La Salle played good
defense in the second and third set, Ateneo didn’t play well. They had too many
unforced errors. However the first set provided a glimpse of what the
Lady Eagles could be and accomplish when they set their minds to it. It
wasn’t all Alyssa Valdez. Bea De Leon provided Ateneo their first real force in
the middle since never. Ella De Jesus, Amy Ahomiro, and Michelle Morente
contributed too. When that happens, it makes life easier for Valdez and
opponents cannot key their defense to one person.
The Lady Spikers have always had a lot of wondrous
scorers, inspirational leaders, and terrific net and floor defense. That is
what helped them become a volleyball power in recent years. After that first
set, DLSU Coach Ramil De Jesus dug into his bench and got some contributions from
Christine Soyud and Mary Joy Baron who responded well by playing great
defense.
This is where the adjustment is key. And while help
from the bench is one, it oft falls upon the setter to get the offense going. This
is where Jia Morado has been key for Ateneo. Last year, she showed great
volleyball IQ for a freshman and that is huge.
In last Sunday’s game, during that third set, she
kept feeding the ball to Valdez that the offense became predictable. It sort of
reminded me of that match between Adamson and UP days earlier when the Amanda
Villanueva was oft set up from the open position and the Lady Maroons simply put
up a wall where she was located. Mylene Paat scored some but Adamson forgot
her. In the end, Villanueva got tired and made two huge mistakes in the endgame
that cost them the set and ultimately, the match.
Back to La Salle’s blocking, in years past, the Lady
Eagles, even during the time of Roger Gorayeb tried to work around that wall.
In Roger’s last year with Ateneo, he had Valdez attacking up the middle to give
DLSU a different look. It was also contingent upon Fille Cainglet and Dzi
Gervacio scoring from either side. It worked to an extent but consistency was
the problem.
When Morado began to find her other teammates –
including Jhoana Maraguinot – that opened up the floor for Ateneo.
Having watched both teams through the years, winning
five-setters is due to several things – talent and the number of weapons on both
ends of the floor that you have, experience, fitness, and mental toughness.
When Ateneo’s former Fab Five were freshmen, they played about four
five-setters in the first round and lost every one of them. When they learned
how to win those, they next hurdle was getting past Adamson and later, La
Salle. The lessons learned in the playoffs last year where they ditched
Adamson and NU before erasing La Salle’s thrice-to-beat advantage is huge.
The timeout where Anusorn Bundit told his girls to meditate cannot be
underestimated – clear your thoughts and go back to your system and what got
you there. People think that the Thai coach doesn’t need to do a lot of coaching.
If people thought that Gorayeb’s practices were tough, Bundit’s is punishing.
That is where he does his coaching. Thai whether through the language barrier or
not has learned to tread that line where you coach and do not over-coach and do
not under-coach. Just reminders. I think this has helped Ateneo these
past two years. I have always decried coaches who belabor the obvious and get
mad at the slightest mistake that it makes players tentative.
When Morente, who isn’t 100% came out for Maraguinot,
the player who had to wait two years to make her debut with Ateneo, got her
best playing time this season and came through. I believe her points were
crucial and when it came, La Salle had to mind where she was located. When De
Leon and Ahomiro began to find some holes in the middle, La Salle got confused.
Ara Galang didn’t have a great game. She scattered
her points but she was defended well. I thought that Mika Reyes needed to pick
up the slack and ease the pressure on Galang. La Salle got significant
contributions from several players but they needed to step up in the crunch.
In a turn of events, the Lady Spikers’ errors piled
up, they got stopped, and they got blanked. And like any sport, you view it
with either glee or dismay depending on which side you root for, or if an
objective observer, wonder how sides can unravel in a huff and commit mistakes
in bunches.
So correlating my thoughts on my pre-game musings, I
still believe that fatigue was played a factor but just a bit. It became a
mental game. La Salle looked forward to the match but Ateneo showed no fear against La
Salle. They chucked that with their title run. Even with the
disadvantage of having played a game before and you begin to get tired a bit,
they dug deep and took the game from their tough rival. As for Bea De Leon, she
was solid. What an impact rookie.
The second round meeting will even be more
interesting. And who knows, maybe beyond.
Be not afraid!
ReplyDeleteIMO, wasn't too worried about the fatigue factor, as they (Lady Eagles) already had a taste of it: prior to this set of games, they participated in the ASEAN University Games, and contended with Malaysia, Indonesia, and Thailand in a span of three consecutive days (1 game each), then Singapore and Malaysia (again, for the bronze), in a span of two consecutive days (also 1 game each). Point is, they've been there, done that, and most probably have knowledge on how to pace themselves prior to the DLSU game.
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