Wednesday, November 29, 2017
2 pictures I love from the just concluded Rebisco Volleyball League
I love this picture. This was at the end of the tournament when all the awards and trophies have been given away. It brings the top three squads of the tournament together -- Nazareth School of National University, De La Salle Lipa, and Holy Rosary College in one picture. But what I love about the picture is that there are no forlorn faces here. Especially for De La Salle Lipa which lost in four sets to NSNU.
What I love about the sport of volleyball is how teams bow to each other after the game. Sports can get intense and even unruly. But the values of sportsmanship must always be observed lest we get consumed by this "winning at all costs" mentality that sucks the life out of the game.
Personally, I am happy to see Rebisco pick up the reigns from the old Shakey's Girls League. It provides a terrific venue for teams around the country to show what they can do. And if helps these kids get collegiate scholarships, that's even better.
And the picture above brings all the participants of the just-concluded Rebisco Volleyball League in one picture. The entire national finals lasted seven days! But what a seven days.
Monday, November 27, 2017
NU Lady Bullpups nab Rebisco Volleyball League championship
NU Lady Bullpups nab Rebisco Volleyball
League championship
by rick olivares
For a moment, the De La Salle
Lipa Green Chevrons looked like they were going to turn the match on its head. But
you know the saying in the vernacular… “pinatikim lang”? The Nazareth School of National University Lady
Bullpups stamped their class and talent on the match and crushed the
Batangas-based six in the third and fourth sets to claim the first ever Rebisco
Volleyball League Girls 18 and Under championship, 25-23, 24-26, 25-14, 25-12
at the Sta. Rosa Sports Complex in Laguna.
The first two sets of the much
anticipated finals between long-time high school power, La Salle Lipa, and NSNU,
the new power rising from Sampaloc, Manila were exactly what everyone expected –
taught and closely-fought thrillers.
Come the third set, it looked
like it would be more of the same as Lipa setter Janel Maraguinot’s serves kept
them a step ahead of the Lady Bullpups, 4-3. But two consecutive blocks by NSNU’s
tall frontline of Ivy Lacsina, Alyssa Solomon, and Faith Nisperos and a
receiving error by Lipa saw the Lady Bullpups take the lead for good, 8-4. NSNU
setter Joyme Cagande made sure to feed her tall teammates and the wall and the towering
spikes ended any threat from DLSL.
NSNU’s Faith Nisperos led her
team with 17 points.
Said NSNU head coach Raymond
Castillo after the win, “Sometimes, we have this tendency to coast a bit
because the team knows they have talent. That is what we have been trying to
fix that they play consistently. We saw how they raised the level of their game
in the last two sets.”
“We gave our best,” explained
DLSL head coach Ronwald Kris Dimaculangan. “NU showed why they are a good team –
when challenged, they raised the level of our game. We have a young team and we
hope the new players will learn a lot from this. But we are happy with what we
achieved given we are in a rebuilding phase.”
Lady Bullpup Ivy Lacsina and Hope
Christian High School’s Ethan Arce were named the Best Middle Blockers. Awarded
as the Best Outside Attackers were NSNU’s Alyssa Solomon and La Salle’s Mirgie
Bautista. Three other Green Chevrons were also feted awards including Alleiah
Malaluan who was named Best Opposite Attacker; an award she has won for the
last three seasons (including the last two Shakey’s Girls Tournaments). Her
teammate, Janel Maraguinot, was named the tournament’s Best Setter for the
fourth straight year while Reign Lumbera was named the Best Libero.
Faith Nisperos of NSNU took home
the Most Valuable Player award.
Sunday, November 26, 2017
Preview of the Rebisco Volleyball League Finals between NSNU & DLSL
Preview of the Rebisco Volleyball League
Finals between NSNU & DLSL
They were the pre-tourney
favorites and they have lived up to the billing.
For the 2017 Rebisco Volleyball
League title, it’s going to be Nazareth School versus De La Salle Lipa.
Both teams sport an unblemished
6-0 record. After today, they part ways.
It is going to come down to
defense. Who owns that wall. Who digs best. And when they make that quick
switch from defense to offense, who can puncture the opposing team’s D.
The Green Chevrons have long been
the regional champion. In recent years the Lady Bullpups have become a UAAP
power.
NSNU is the taller team and they
have the deeper bench. DLSL has a few veterans but they have some talented
newcomers.
Will NSNU go full throttle since
they are also playing this coming Monday for the UAAP title? This is where
their bench comes to play. But they didn’t come all the way to Laguna to finish
second. As the team says, they are being groomed to play for multiple titles in
as many days.
Will DLSL take it to their foe
from the opening serve? In our opinion, if setter Janel Maraguinot can get her
teammates involved from both wing and middle positions, they have a chance.
Does experience count? Sure it
does. But this also boils down to desire.
Just rambling after that Game 1 win
Just rambling after that Game 1 win
by rick olivares
Let’s put aside the analysis for this game. Let me ramble while sipping my coffee.
I find myself wracking my brain.
Where have I seen this before? I have to sit and think long and hard; trying to
recall basketball seasons past.
As a high school student, my
classmates said, ‘Let’s go watch the seniors games. Yung utol ni Jun (Reyes)
naglalaro.” Although I caught a few games of those great Ateneo NCAA teams of
yore, I was a grade schooler and I hardly remember anything except for the
tense atmosphere, short shorts, and the Converse Chuck Taylors. As far as I am
concerned, my Ateneo Blue Eagle basketball history dates back to the last year
Chot Reyes was playing. And I kind of
Those teams were small. The
moment they took the court, dehado na sila. Their center was Mike Facundo with
Vince Araneta, under-sized at his position, is back-up. There was no
three-point shot at that time. Had there been one, they might have won a few
more matches. In some ways, there are similarities but that was mostly because
of the composition of the team – a couple of undersized bigs and a plethora of
shooters.
But that doesn’t tell the whole
thing so I think back?
I think of the three-peat of 2010
– yung pampatawid to the five-peat. When Justin Chua was that team’s version of
Isaac Go (although the former missed his three-point attempts, he shot a whopping 48% from the field that year) with Emman Monfort akin to Anton Asistio. They were a team that faced
a tough and deep team in FEU in the finals and the Tams were seeded (by others
and not me – my prediction in Rebound magazine was a championship for blue and
white and not because of my being blue but I thought the team was tough, smart,
poised, and played like a team).
But still it isn’t as the season
stats do not even compare:
Season 73 average: 62.9 points, 41.2
rebounds, 12.2 assists, 4.5 steals, 3.9 blocks, 16.8 turnovers.
Season 80 average: 85.2 points,
45.1 rebounds, 17.9 assists, 5.2 steals, 3.4 blocks, 16.1 turnovers.
This current Blue Eagles team is
its own.
As I have said, if you saw them
during the summer, they were awful. But that was because they hardly practiced
as the focus was on school. However, the last month preceding the UAAP
tournament, they looked darn good. Just exactly as how you are seeing them.
It has been a season of moments,
right? Remember that first game where Tyler Tio opened his UAAP/Ateneo account
by playing a memorable debut (he has cooled off since but is beginning to show
signs of rebounding from his woes)? Remember the first round match with UST
where the Blue Eagles survived a furious Growling Tigers rally and atrocious
calls? Remember how we stopped worrying about Chibueze Ikeh as he showed a lot
of maturity and big game-ness this season to really give the team a lift? Remember
that vicious Thirdy Ravena tomahawk during the second round UST game? Remember
Matt Nieto making up for a turnover with a steal and a crucial basket against
La Salle in the first round? Remember the games against NU, FEU, and UP where
the team came through in the fourth period for a win? And barely a week ago,
that Final Four win against FEU where Isaac Go and Matt Nieto hit some of the
most memorable shots in Ateneo basketball (let alone) UAAP history to send the
team to the finals against one of the finest basketball teams we’ve seen in
college cage history?
And now there’s that Game 1
Finals win where Matt Nieto got bloodied and came back to play. It’s somewhat
of a Willis Reed moment. And there’s his twin brother Mike Nieto, fuming, but
making the Green Archers pay with timely shots and putbacks. And there’s even
more Isaac Go clutchness too.
Wait… I am getting ahead of
myself. When people would ask me this season, I said if Ateneo wants to win it,
they need to take Game One. Winning it is an advantage. I expected La Salle to
be physical but man, this game, they were trying to punish us physically. Did
anyone get the plate number of that truck named Ben Mbala? He ran over everyone
who stood in his path. I thought it wouldn’t take long before someone becomes –
for lack of a better term – roadkill. Seeing Matt bloodied – I wondered about
that. I shook my head and felt some anger perhaps like most not wearing green
who were watching the game. Now, let me digress for a moment. When Greg
Slaughter manned the slot for Ateneo, he was taller than anyone who guarded
him. When he’d turn at the post, the opponent’s strategy was to make sure their
face was near his elbow so when he’d turn he’d be whistled for a foul. So why
was it different now?
The old Ateneo teams (especially
my batch teams of 1987-88 that won the school’s first UAAP crowns) would
retaliate. But I am glad we didn’t. Hearing Mike Nieto talk about it and how he’d
instead focus on the game rather than let his emotions take over him… I thought
back to the time when Eric Salamat asked Norman Black for permission to
retaliate but the then-Ateneo head coach said no. And Mike chose to make them
pay in another way.
And I love how Anton Asistio and
Tyler Tio broke out of their slumps. I told Tyler folks during our recent
dinner and after the semis loss to FEU that Tyler would be fine soon (more so
next season as it’s all adjustment). It was good to see Vince Tolentino and
Raffy Verano play well too as Isaac Go and Chib Ikeh – who both did their part
by the way – were saddled with fouls.
The Blue Eagles survived another
hot shooting day by Aljun Melecio and strong play by Kib Montalbo, and that
frightening frontline of Mbala, Abu Tratter, Leonard Santillan, and Justine
Baltazar. What a great stand in the last two minutes.
Just thinking of Game Two – La Salle
will be even more physical. Ben Mbala will be back (after he was confounded for
most of the game). It will be twice the anxiety, intensity, and tension. We
will need a few more moments like this to grab a title from this frightening green
machine. The Ateneo Blue Eagles have to seize that moment. If they do, now this
will be a season to truly remember.