VOLLEY

PVL adopts new format for AFC

DT

Trimmed to a 10-team field but richer in balance and intrigue, the Premier Volleyball League (PVL) opens its flagship tournament — the All-Filipino Conference (AFC) — at the FilOil Playtime Centre on 31 January.

What makes this season-ender one of the most eagerly anticipated in recent memory is not just the streamlined lineup, but a revamped competition format designed to reward excellence, sustain suspense, and keep more teams in the title hunt longer.

Under the new system, a team that sweeps the single round-robin eliminations earns an outright berth in the semifinals — a premium incentive that comes with fewer knockout games and a clearer path toward the championship. However, with teams appearing nearly even on paper, such a sweep looms as a near-impossible feat.

Should no team dominate the eliminations, the top four squads will clash in the Qualifying Round knockout matches, with the winners advancing to the next round.

The losing teams, meanwhile, are not immediately eliminated. Instead, they drop into the newly introduced Play-In Stepladder phase — another first for the league — where teams ranked fifth to 10th get a second chance to stay alive.

This Play-In format injects an added layer of drama and unpredictability, ensuring that no game is meaningless and that late surges can still rewrite a team’s destiny. Rankings throughout the eliminations and beyond will be determined using the FIVB Team Classification System, which accounts for wins, set ratio, and points ratio, reinforcing fairness and consistency.

The semis will be contested in a single round-robin format, again using the FIVB system to rank the teams. From there, the top two will battle for the championship in a best-of-three Finals series at the Araneta Coliseum, with the organizing Sports Vision targeting a 28 April conclusion.

The season will open with a pair of compelling matchups as new-look Galeries Tower takes on Cignal at 4 p.m., followed by Akari testing the reinforced Choco Mucho side at 6:30 p.m.

More high-octane encounters follow on 3 February also in San Juan, with Farm Fresh locking horns with a retooled Nxled squad at 4 p.m., and last conference’s breakout team ZUS Coffee facing Capital1 at 6:30 p.m.

Crowd favorite Creamline finally makes its conference debut on 5 February squaring off against PLDT in a marquee 6:30 p.m. clash, also at the FilOil Centre, after the 4 p.m. showdown between Choco Mucho and Cignal.

With defending champion Petro Gazz taking a leave of absence and Chery Tiggo folding up, the PVL now operates with a tighter 10-team cast. However, rather than diminishing the competition, this shift has redistributed talent across the league — a development that could further level the playing field.