Creamline Overcomes Jordan to Start AVC Campaign Strong
Creamline overcame early nerves and chemistry concerns to open its 2025 AVC Women’s Champions League campaign with a 29-27, 25-20, 25-19 win over Al Naser of Jordan at the Philsports Arena on Sunday, seizing the early Pool A lead. Still reeling from a tough loss in the Premier Volleyball League All-Filipino Finals that ended their

By Staff Writer

Creamline overcame early nerves and chemistry concerns to open its 2025 AVC Women’s Champions League campaign with a 29-27, 25-20, 25-19 win over Al Naser of Jordan at the Philsports Arena on Sunday, seizing the early Pool A lead.
Still reeling from a tough loss in the Premier Volleyball League All-Filipino Finals that ended their historic reign, the Cool Smashers had to withstand a gritty stand by the young but fearless Jordanian side in the opening set.
The tight first frame exposed Creamline’s growing pains as the team worked to find rhythm and cohesion with two of its three new imports seeing action for the first time.
“It was a good fight, and we’re very grateful we got the win,” said Alyssa Valdez, who emerged as Best Player of the Game with 10 points, including seven on attacks.
“Even if they’re young, we had to give it our all. They train hard, too, and they’ll find ways to score.”
Creamline head coach Sherwin Meneses experimented with different combinations early, particularly in the setter rotation, as he tried to integrate American reinforcement Erica Staunton, Kazakh middle blocker Anastassiya Kolomoyets and Russian outside hitter Anastasya Kudryashova into the local-dominated core.
The rotation of Rhea Villarete and Kyle Negrito at the setter spot proved instrumental in stabilizing the team and allowing the wing spikers to find their groove.
Staunton, familiar to fans from last year’s Grand Slam run, once again showed why she’s a vital asset, bringing consistent firepower and composure during crucial moments.
“Playing with three imports is new for us,” added Valdez.
“We never had this kind of experience before. Communication is key, and we’re working on it. Our system is different, so integrating them into our style takes time.”
The win mirrored the strong starts of Kaohsiung Taipower (Pool B) and Beijing Baic Motor (Pool C) in the four-group, 12-club tournament featuring top teams from 10 countries, including three representatives from the host nation.
Those victories bring them a step closer to the quarterfinals of the eight-day championship, which is supported by Mikasa, Mizuno and Grand Sport as federation partners.
“Importante yung game ngayon kasi I think makaka-ensayo pa kami ng ilang days para sa adjustment sa three imports, especially doon sa two imports na bago namin. I think one to two days pa, magiging maganda na yung performance namin,” said Meneses.
In the third set, Al Naser threatened to close the gap after an attack error from Kolomoyets and a crosscourt hit by Klein Pully trimmed Creamline’s lead to 16-14.
But the Jordanians faltered under pressure—a service error from Da Silveira Isabela Paquiadri, a mishit by Pully and a sharp crosscourt kill by Staunton allowed the Cool Smashers to restore control with a 19-14 cushion.
Staunton then took over in crunch time, delivering back-to-back kills from both wings to cap the 82-minute match.
The 24-year-old American import scored four of Creamline’s last five points—highlighted by two crosscourt missiles, an off-the-block hit and a game-winning off-the-block attack.
Lorie Bernardo also made her presence felt late, notching a kill block that helped seal Creamline’s strong start in the tournament organized by Sports Vision and supported by PLDT, MWell, Eagle Cement, Rebisco, Akari, Gameville, PNVF, PSC, Cignal and The Look Group.
Riding the momentum from their thrilling first set win, the Cool Smashers surged ahead in the second frame with a commanding 21-17 lead.
They pulled away behind three decisive attacks from Kudryashova and a well-timed service ace from Pangs Panaga to establish a 2-0 advantage.
Earlier, in the extended first set, with the score tied at 26, Jema Galanza came off the bench and made an immediate impact, delivering back-to-back combination plays.
Panaga then rose to the occasion, rejecting Al Naser’s Marques Natiele at the net to secure the set for Creamline.
Despite a shaky start, Creamline’s depth and experience showed in the second and third sets, where they reasserted control and played with more fluidity to complete the sweep.
Article Information
Comments (0)
LEAVE A REPLY
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts!
Related Articles

Inoue scores unanimous decision win over Nakatani to remain undisputed
And that is why he is called the “Monster.” On May 2, 2026, Naoya Inoue remained the undisputed king of the super bantamweight division after beating Junto Nakatani via unanimous decision, 116-112, 115-113, 116-112, at Tokyo Dome. With the win, Inoue retained his World Boxing Association, World Boxing

