In winning NCAA MVP, Mondoñedo blazes a rare statistical trail


St. Benilde Blazers star Cloanne Mondoñedo during Collegiate Press Coprs Awards. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

Everybody in the NCAA knew that Cloanne Mondoñedo deserved to win the women’s volleyball MVP award.

Except, maybe, St. Benilde’s ace playmaker herself.

“I had to convince myself that maybe this one’s really for me because I really worked hard ever since I joined NCAA,” Mondoñedo said on late Monday evening after being hailed by the Collegiate Press Corps as the finest women’s volleyball athlete of the country’s oldest varsity competition.

Aside from the fact that Mondoñedo believes so many talented players also deserve to be named MVP, there is that one little fact that contributed heavily to her disbelief: Setters rarely win the highest individual award, and Mondoñedo knew her victory was a statistical rarity.

“To be honest, I was surprised. I didn’t expect it,” she said. “Because all I [was expecting] is the [best] setter award as a bonus to winning the championship.”

“I really thought about it. At first, I said, “how?” I asked a lot of questions.” she said, laughing. “Why me? Why me? How did that happen? And then, I was surprised when I accepted the award from NCAA. They told me that it’s very rare to get the MVP and setter.”

In the collegiate ranks, individual awards are purely stats-based, with no votes getting in the way of the process.

And for setters, that’s an obstacle.

Traditionally, the statistical points that count toward the MVP race include points, attacks, blocks, serves, digs, sets and receptions.

Spikers and blockers hog a lot of those statistical points, especially on points and attacks. At most, playmakers draw their points from sets, serves and sometimes—because of their general proximity to the net—blocks. Digs may be scattered among team members but often, opposing squads have a specific target with their services, lessening the chances for setters to earn points off receptions.

Long-time beat reporters of the NCAA explained that it took a confluence of events to open up a path for Mondoñedo toward the MVP award.

First, a majority of the statistical points, especially the bonuses for won games, were sucked in by St. Benilde. And the Lady Blazers’ production was well spread out across its talented roster.

Then, there was the fact that there was no dominant performer in the NCAA the way the UAAP had. No Bella Belen, Angge Poyos, Angel Canino or Casiey Dongallo coming up with monster 20-plus points a game the way former San Sebastian star Grethcel Soltones did before.

Crucially, perhaps, the MVP candidates of the NCAA were culled from the four teams that survived the elimination round.

Unless those factors combine in a season again, setters—who get the team offense going and open up opportunities for their spikers and blockers to score—may not be in the mix of MVP contenders.

It was quite telling during the CPC Awards Night that Mondoñedo’s feat was described as something that “hasn’t happened in recent memory”—which is shorthand for “we can’t recall if this has happened at all.” In the UAAP, at least since the 1996-97 season, no setter has won the MVP award.



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Perhaps it is time to adjust the process for selecting the best individual athlete in a tournament? INQ

PVL: Cloanne Mondoñedo banks on familiarity with ZUS Coffee


St. Benilde Blazers star Cloanne Mondoñedo during Collegiate Press Coprs Awards. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

MANILA, Philippines — After steering the College of Saint Benilde to an unbeaten ‘three-peat’ in the NCAA, Cloanne Mondoñedo prepares for the next chapter of her career with ZUS Coffee in the PVL Reinforced Conference starting in July.

Mondoñedo, the Collegiate Press Corps’ NCAA Women’s Volleyball Player of the Year, is tempering her expectations heading to the pros although she and some of her fellow Lady Blazers already experienced playing in the PVL as guest players for Farm Fresh.

“We will just show what we’re capable of and perform [our roles],” the NCAA Season 99 MVP and Best Setter.

READ: PH women’s basketball, men’s volleyball standouts feted

“It’s gonna be like big adjustments for us not. It’s a huge job for us,” she added.

Mondoñedo won’t need to undergo the PVL Rookie Draft as she and her St. Benilde teammates Gayle Pascual, Michelle Gamit, and Jade Gentapa already played for Farm Fresh last year.

As she runs the plays for ZUS Coffee, formerly Strong Group Athletics, the young setter is grateful to have her coach Jerry Yee and fellow Lady Blazers leading a rebuilding team.

“Our familiarity is a big factor for us. It will be easier for us to bond and communicate,” she said.

ZUS Coffee has a 40% chance of getting the top pick in the draft lottery on Monday.



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Pestrana, Mondoñedo join top awardees


Cloanne Mondoñedo

University of Santo Tomas’ Kent Pestrana and St. Benilde’s Cloanne Mondoñedo may get lost amid the big names when the Collegiate Press Corps awards six athletes as its Players of the Year on June 17.

After all, two of the biggest names in the current college scene—National University’s volleyball ace Bella Belen and La Salle’s do-it-all big Kevin Quiambao—will be among the six to be honored by sports journalists covering the varsity beat.

But Pestrana and Mondoñedo, among with similarly lesser-heralded honorees Louie Ramirez of Perpetual’s dynastic men’s volleyball team and Joshua Retamar of “four-peat” champions National U, certainly have the credentials to back their nominations.

Pestrana, for one, spearheaded a relentless bunch of Tigresses who stunned the UAAP women’s basketball scene by putting an end to the Lady Bulldogs’ seven-year reign as champions. In a show of grit, UST eked out a dramatic series victory over NU, brining the women’s trophy back to España after nearly two decades.

Unbroken streak

Mondoñedo, meanwhile, pulled off a feat that doesn’t happen much in volleyball: The Lady Blazers playmaker won the women’s MVP trophy—an award normally contested by spikers and middle blockers—after steering St. Benilde to the NCAA women’s crown.

Mondoñedo’s quarterbacking also preserved St. Benilde’s unbroken winning streak, which has now reached 40 games.

Retamar, meanwhile, led NU as it preserved its hold of men’s volleyball superiority in the UAAP, the same achievement by Ramirez, who led Perpetual to the championship en route to winning the NCAA MVP award.

Quiambao and Belen hardly need any introduction.Belen was named MVP of Season 86’s women’s volleyball tournament and then steered the Lady Bulldogs to the UAAP crown.

Quiambao, meanwhile was season MVP and Finals MVP as he reinstalled La Salle back to the top of UAAP men’s basketball. —INQUIRER SPORTS STAFF 



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