Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Lowdown: DLSU vs FEU (4-Mar-09)

Game Two of the Women's Volleyball Finals was a reversal--up to an extent--of what happened in Game One, which I watched at The Arena. This time, I watched at home, half thinking that I may have jinxed La Salle, my favorite team. Well, they won so I guess watching at home was better for me--and the team--than watching at the venue. Ha, chika lang. I had tons of schoolwork so I had to watch at home.

Anyway. La Salle won in four-set fashion. FEU won the first, then La Salle won the next three. Set Number Two was, for me, the clincher. It spelled the difference. It was a neck-to-neck set that either team could have won. If FEU won that one (Coach Nes Pamilar put in the injured Shaira Gonzales for emotional sake I think) they could have easily won the championship. La Salle was defeated in the first set, 25-17. La Salle winning that set pumped up their game--slowly--and gave them the confidence that they needed.



Why La Salle won:


1. Jacqueline Alarca stepped up big time. She said--in the post-game interview because she was the best player--she had to prove that she wasn't a Best Blocker for nothing. :D Boom Gonzales, the commentator, pointed out that when Alarca started smiling and enjoying every point she won for the team was when the other players were affected. Which brings me to the next reason..


2. Intensity. FEU players have always been known to have intensity. From the onset, Morada and company rejoiced after every point scored. Thus, iritating the La Salle Spikers, who were very much affected by the crowd in Game One. In Game Two, La Salle players started feeling every point in Set Number Two and Three. Behind Alarca's exploits and Michelle Datuin's ever-present intensity at the net. She got Morada's number, definitely.


3. Defense. Blocking was surprisingly missing for La Salle in the first two sets but they adjusted. Floor defense improved as the blocking materialized. I think losing the first set made the La Salle players realize the urgency of winning, and stepping up. Thus, they dove for every ball, jumped for every spike, and tried to dig every attack that went their way. All of April Jose's drop balls were checked. :D


4. Much-improved service. In Game One, as I've pointed out, there were too much service errors on La Salle's side. This time, Manilla Santos (who was by the way always checked and dug by FEU's libero, Taganas) only had one service error--as per my unofficial count--and Alarca and Mercado had one each as well.


5. Other players stepped up. Aside from the usual suspect on offense--Illa Santos (who was berated by Coach Ramil De Jesus for not variating her shots. I think he said something like, "Sa lahat ng pinalo mo, ilan ang napatay mo?" With that, she was brought to life and scored points on her varied attacks.) Stephanie Mercado finished the game (at the end part of the third and fourth set), scored a flurry of points, for La Salle. Alarca stepped up into the scoring parade as well. And even players like Datuin and Cha Cruz scored on some of their attacks.


6. The presence of an improved-in-numbers La Salle fans. Now, there was a Barangay La Salle--na wala nu'ng Game One.


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Why FEU lost:


1. Shaira Gonzales didn't play much because of her injured left--or was it right?--ankle. I hope it's just a serious sprain, not anything more. She was able to play though. And scored dramatic points in the second and third set. They sorely missed her quicks. Their seventh--or eighth--player was Cabanag, who is obviously not as great as Gonzales.


2. Cherry Mae Vivas wasn't in her element. She was often asked by Coach Nes during timeouts, "Ano ayaw mo na?" She even "scored" La Salle's winning point in the fourth set by miscalculating what should have been "an easy over."


3. Morada's attacks were well-read, checked or blocked by the La Salle defense in the latter sets because the offense became predictable with Daquis in the back row, and Jose having no other options but to go to Morada. Her psy-war and verbal tussle with Datuin at the net really went up the next level, so to speak.


I am excited for Game Three, the deciding Game, but I won't be able to watch the game because I'll be in Sagada this weekend. But still, I will be rooting for the Lady Spikers, of course.














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