Veterans like Alyssa Valdez (left) will help young guns like Thea Gagate grow. —PVL IMAGES
For veterans Alyssa Valdez and Jovelyn Gonzaga, representing the country has a different feel.
So when the opportunity arose, both were more than willing to answer the call.
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“We’re very, very humbled and excited to be part of the national team again and represent the country with pride,” Valdez said Tuesday during the Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum at the Philippine Sports Commission conference room.
“But realistically, we cannot predict anything. All we can do now is prepare well and represent the country with honor and pride.”
Valdez and Gonzaga are among the national pool members of Alas Pilipinas, which is preparing for the 2026 AVC Women’s Volleyball Nations Cup next month in Candon City, Ilocos Sur,
The AVC tournament, formerly known as the Challenge Cup, runs from June 6 to 14 and features 12 teams from across Asia and Oceania.
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For Gonzaga, whose national team experience spans both indoor and beach volleyball, the chance to return to duty remains difficult to refuse.
“It feels so good to be back with the national team,” Gonzaga said in Filipino. “We’re excited. Once the country calls for your service, we’re here. It’s hard to turn down the national team.”
Interim coach Shaq delos Santos said the team remains in the process of finalizing its roster from a 20-player pool that also includes Ces Molina, Niña Ytang, Tots Carlos, Ara Galang and Thea Gagate.
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The national program has been hit by withdrawals of key players who were part of Alas Pilipinas rise’ over the past two years, when the national team made a tremendous leap in the world rankings under former coach Jorge de Brito.
While players cited personal reasons as backing out, two sources close to several standouts of the team told the Inquirer that the former national squad members were disappointed over how the previous gains were wiped out instead of being used as a foundation for further growth.
The result has the national program scrambling from scratch, with coach Shaq Delos Santos building a pool around those who committed to the team.
“We invited lots of players and some of them had personal decisions to beg off, but we’re still very happy and lucky,” delos Santos said. “We have players who are committed to represent our country.”
Delos Santos added that the current focus is less about medal projections and more about building chemistry ahead of the continental competition.
“The goal right now is how to strengthen the team,” he said. “We’re focused on building a team where the players will do their roles, work together and fight for the Philippines.”
The coach said the team is expected to train in Candon next week as preparations intensify.
Valdez, Gonzaga and Molina were all part of the Philippine squad that competed in the 2019 Southeast Asian Games, giving the current pool a veteran core expected to guide younger players in the tournament.
“For now, the focus is preparation,” Gonzaga said. “There are no expectations yet.”
The Philippines was drawn into Pool A alongside South Korea, Chinese Taipei, Australia, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Defending champion Vietnam leads Pool B with Kazakhstan, Iran, Indonesia, Hong Kong and Lebanon. INQUIRER SPORTS DESK
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