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Philippines working to improve Japan market access deals for fruit

ANFLOCOR.COM/TADECO

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said the Philippines is working to improve market access to Japan for key fruit products like bananas, pomelos, and mangoes.

In a statement on Wednesday, the DA said Agriculture Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel, Jr. met with Japan’s new agriculture minister and the senior vice-president of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) to discuss lower tariffs on fresh bananas shipped to Japan.

Mr. Laurel has said that the government is pushing to lower the duties to a fixed rate of between 5% to 8% from the current seasonal tariff rates of 8% to 18%.

The DA said the tariff negotiations are meant to serve as a temporary measure to keep Philippine bananas competitive, while the country works toward securing zero duties when it accedes to the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

The CPTPP is a free trade agreement whose members include Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the UK, and Vietnam. It provides for more liberalized trade, including zero tariffs on a wide range of goods.

The DA said it is also seeking expanded market access for pomelos and updated protocols for the entry of mango, papaya, and poultry from avian flu-free regions.

Former Agriculture Undersecretary Fermin D. Adriano told BusinessWorld that lower tariffs on bananas would be a “tremendous help,” as Japan is the country’s largest market for the fruit.

“Unlike bananas from Ecuador, which are imposed a zero tariff when entering the Japanese market, Philippine banana is slapped a tariff of 8% to 18%, depending on the season,” he said via Viber.

Mr. Adriano added that the proposed rationalization of quarantine measures for other fruit exports, such as mango and papaya, could help expand the market, as these fruits currently face strict sanitary and phytosanitary requirements.

However, Mr. Adriano said Japan might request reciprocal tariff reductions for its exports to the Philippines as a precondition for any agreement.

Meanwhile, the DA said it also proposed expanding the existing memorandum of cooperation (MoC) on agriculture between Japan and the Philippines to include fisheries.

“Japan welcomed the (proposed amendment) and will host the second Philippines-Japan Joint Committee on Agriculture meeting in June. Secretary Laurel expressed hope that the amended MoC will be signed this year,” the DA said.

The DA said the Philippines also secured Japanese aid for a rice processing hub in Cauayan City, Isabela, with a grant agreement set for signing in February.

The DA also requested JICA support for other projects, including integrated food logistics hubs, a nationwide study on commodity distribution, modernization of small-scale fisheries, the rehabilitation of Magat Dam, and the expansion of the DA’s vegetable value chain project. — Vonn Andrei E. Villamiel

Packaging industry seen growing 3.2% per year

FACEBOOK.COM/PROPAKPHILIPPINES

THE Philippine processing and packaging industry is expected to grow 3.2% a year, according to Informa Markets.

“The overview of the processing and packaging industry in the Philippines is very interesting, with annual growth of around 3.2%,” Rungphech Chitanuwat, general manager for the Philippines at Informa Markets, said at the opening ceremony of ProPak Philippines 2026 on Wednesday.

“The volume of packaging in the Philippines was 78.5 billion units in 2024, but you guys will reach 91.8 billion in 2029,” she added. 

She said that the outlook reflects “increasing consumption and innovation and development,” she added.

However, she said that consumers today are more conscious about the sustainability of the materials they consume, which makes it important for the industry to take a sustainability approach.

“The convergence of consumer consciousness and technological advancement is creating new market segments and business models that position the Philippines as a regional hub for sustainable packaging solutions,” she said.

“Companies that embrace consumer-conscious innovation today will lead tomorrow’s markets, capturing both domestic opportunities and export potential in an increasingly sustainability-focused global economy,” she added.

Science and Technology Secretary Renato U. Solidum, Jr. said that sustainability requires the participation of everyone.

He said the department hopes to help businesses become more efficient, compliant, and competitive through better technology and smarter processes.

“We will engage micro, small, and medium enterprises one-on-one to help them improve their production and increase the skills of their employees through capacity building,” he added.

In the medium term, the Department of Science and Technology (DoST) will be investing in innovation systems and supporting research and development, digitalization, and business model innovation.

“Here, we target 500 tech enterprises to be scaled globally,” he said.

The DoST will also be introducing the Philippine Technology Evaluation and Standards Testing Facility.

“We will implement this with the Commission on Higher Education, where technologies can be tested all over the Philippines so that we can make innovations more market-ready so that investors can see the potential of which technologies they can invest in,” he added. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

WESM prices decline in Jan. as supply improves

BW FILE PHOTO

ELECTRICITY PRICES at the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) declined in January as supply margins improved, according to the Independent Electricity Market Operator of the Philippines (IEMOP).

IEMOP reported on Wednesday that the average WESM rate decreased 18.6% month on month to P3.56 per kilowatt-hour (kWh).

Between Dec. 26 and Jan. 25, the available power supply declined 5.3% month on month to 19,152 megawatts (MW). Demand, on the other hand, dipped 7.1% to 12,492 MW.

Tight supply margins on Luzon drove the average price to rise 9% year on year to P3.25 per kWh.

IEMOP said forced outages from coal and gas-fired plants on Luzon that took 4,811 MW out of commission, leading to the increased use of oil-based and other higher-cost sources.

Power supply decreased 8.3% month on month to 13,228 MW. Meanwhile, demand fell 8% to 8,574 MW.

“However, in the Visayas and Mindanao, prices dropped significantly, which is good news for WESM participants in the Visayas and Mindanao,” Isidro E. Cacho, Jr., IEMOP vice-president for trading operations, said in a briefing on Wednesday.

Spot prices in the Visayas plunged 41.2% month on month to P4.24 per kWh.

Available supply decreased 6.4% to 2,361 MW, while demand fell 5.9% to 1,861 MW.

On Mindanao, IEMOP reported a decline of 45.5% month on month to P4.27 per kWh, with supply increasing 8.4% to 3,563 MW and demand falling 3.8% to 2,056 MW. 

Coal-fired plants accounted for 58.7% of the market, followed by renewable energy with 27%, natural gas 13%, and oil-based generation 0.5%.

As the dry season approaches, Mr. Cacho is expecting improved supply with the entry of new renewable energy plants.

He also cited the extension of the supply contract that allows Manila Electric Co. to continue procuring power from a major gas-fired plant in Batangas, easing uncertainty about its sourcing.

“Hopefully, (the dry season) won’t be like what we experienced in 2024, when we had extreme heat that really caused demand to spike — so much so that we had numerous yellow alerts and red alerts,” he said.

IEMOP operates the WESM, where energy companies can purchase power when their long-term contracted power supply is insufficient for customer needs. —  Sheldeen Joy Talavera

A promising step toward tax audit reform

The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) ended the two-month suspension of tax audit activities after issuing Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 8-2026 and Revenue Memorandum Order (RMO) No. 1-2026. The latter introduces tax audit process reforms, which include, among others, a move to consolidate tax audit cases involving the same taxpayer and taxable year. The consolidation is a welcome relief as it seeks to address a long-standing pain point in tax administration, which is simultaneous to multiple audits covering the same period.

For years, it has been common practice for the Bureau to issue multiple electronic Letters of Authority (eLAs) to a single taxpayer for the same taxable year. The issuance of three separate eLAs is not unusual, covering two semesters of a value-added tax (VAT) audit, and another encompassing all internal revenue taxes except VAT (AIRT). The resolution of each tax audit entails resources diverted from the business such as manpower, time, and documentation to address the requests and findings raised.

While specialized audits enable more targeted and risk-based examinations, experience has shown us that a fragmented audit approach does not necessarily result in better tax enforcement. The consolidation, if properly implemented, may promote efficiency and coherence in tax audits. To help ensure that the RMO’s implementation aligns with existing rules on due process and audit authority, some points may need to be clarified further.

VAT-ONLY LOAS
The Single-Instance Audit Framework allows taxpayers with multiple ongoing tax audits within the same taxable year to file a Request for Non-Consolidation of Cases by Feb. 16 with the BIR office handling their AIRT audits. Without this, all eLAs for the period are automatically consolidated into one eLA covering all applicable internal revenue tax types under audit.

The VAT Audit Sections (VATAS) and the Large Taxpayers VAT Audit Units (LTVAU) will wind up operations by May 15. However, it is not quite clear how this will affect taxpayers who only have ongoing VAT audits. Will this prompt the issuance of a replacement eLA covering all other internal revenue taxes, such as income tax and withholding taxes?  Given the reason behind these audit reforms (i.e., alleged abuses using these eLAs), it seems reasonable to assume that consolidation would not result in an expanded audit coverage in such cases. Nonetheless, it would be helpful to clarify if the replacement eLA would merely reflect a change in examiners and investigating office (from VATAS to the RDO), without expanding the scope of the audit to include all other internal revenue taxes.

CONSOLIDATION OF CASES AT VARIOUS STAGES
Taxpayers with cases that are at varying procedural stages are also curious how the consolidation will be carried out. The RMO does not specify whether consolidation is limited to audits at the same stage, or whether it also applies to cases where assessment notices have already been issued.

For example, a taxpayer may have a VAT audit at the LoA stage, while the AIRT audit for the same year is already at the Final Assessment Notice (FAN) stage. Can these cases still be consolidated under the RMO? If so, what happens to the assessment already issued? Would issuance of a consolidated eLA reset the proposed tax findings, or would the consolidated audit follow the earlier stage, which in this example, is the LoA stage?

From the taxpayer’s viewpoint, moving up the entire audit to the later stage may impair their constitutional right to due process. However, for the BIR, restarting the case at an earlier point may affect the prescriptive periods and the validity of previously issued assessment notices. Clear parameters are needed to prevent disputes arising not from tax findings, but from procedural uncertainty.

Even more curious are reports that some taxpayers have been advised by certain BIR officers that consolidation will not apply to cases where tax findings have already been issued. This interpretation contradicts the objective of the RMO. Thus, further clarification may be needed to ensure consistent application among revenue officers.

AUTHORITY TO ISSUE A REPLACEMENT LOA
The RMO provides that, as a general rule, the replacement eLA must be issued by the RDO/Office Audit Section (OAS)/Large Taxpayers (LT) Audit Office.

However, the authority to issue an eLA is not vested in the RDO. Depending on the nature and scope of the audit, an eLA must be approved by the Regional Director or higher authority. This distinction is critical, as the eLA is the document that legally authorizes revenue officers to examine a taxpayer’s books and records. Jurisprudence consistently holds that audits conducted without a valid eLA are void.

If an eLA must be replaced due to consolidation, can the RDO validly issue that replacement, or should the replacement eLA be issued by the same authority who approved the original LoA? The RMO does not clarify whether replacing an eLA is merely ministerial or a substantive act requiring the same level of approval. Will the BIR issue a Revenue Delegated Authority Order granting RDOs the power to issue the replacement eLAs? More importantly, would such delegation be sufficient to cure potential validity issues? Given the serious consequences of an invalid LoA, this point deserves explicit guidance.

CASES FOR MANDATORY AUDIT
The RMO identified cases subject to mandatory audit or issuance of an eLA. The first item on the list refers to instances where there is at least a 30% under-declaration of sales or a 30% over-declaration of purchases or expenses.

It is not clear how the BIR would determine a 30% discrepancy without first conducting an audit pursuant to a valid LoA. Will this be based solely on documents already submitted to the BIR, such as income tax returns, VAT returns, and audited financial statements?

Without third-party data, information returns, or prior investigations, identifying such discrepancies would ordinarily require examination of a taxpayer’s books. This is permissible only through a duly issued eLA. Without clarification, the provision appears to assume the existence of findings that can only arise after an audit has begun.

Given the questions surrounding consolidation, the authority to issue replacement eLAs, and the criteria for mandatory audits, I hope that the BIR would allow taxpayers more time to properly evaluate their existing cases and decide whether they prefer to conclude their VAT audits at the VATAS/LTVAU, while still granting them the flexibility to consolidate cases earlier should they choose to do so.

The Bureau may consider allowing taxpayers until April 30 instead of Feb. 16 to decide. Since tax audits vary widely in complexity, both taxpayers and revenue officers need sufficient time to interpret and apply new rules consistently. An extension would also allow the BIR to issue clarificatory guidelines, conduct internal briefings, and ensure that consolidation is successfully implemented so that it achieves the Bureau’s objective in a manner consistent with due process.

RMO No. 1-2026 is, without question, a promising step in the right direction. It acknowledges long‑standing taxpayer concerns and seeks to rationalize tax audit procedures. With timely clarifications and a calibrated implementation timeline, the BIR can strengthen this reform and ensure that consolidation becomes not just a policy objective, but a meaningful improvement in tax administration.

The views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The content is for general information purposes only and should not be used as a substitute for specific advice.

 

Kathrine Joy Capales is a director at the Tax Services department of Isla Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of the PwC network.

kathrine.joy.capales@pwc.com

US returns to Venezuela all $500 million of initial oil sale

A person holds a Venezuelan flag as government supporters gather after US President Donald Trump said the US has struck Venezuela and captured its President Nicolas Maduro, in Caracas, Venezuela, January 3, 2026. — REUTERS/GABY ORAA

WASHINGTON — The United States has now returned to the Venezuelan government all $500 million from the initial sale of oil that was part of a deal reached between Caracas and Washington last month, a US official said on Tuesday.

The last $200 million from the sale has been sent to Venezuela, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The deal came about after Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was captured in a US military operation on Jan. 3.

“Venezuela has officially received all $500 million from the first Venezuelan oil sale,” the official said.

The official added that the money is to be “disbursed for the benefit of the Venezuelan people at the discretion of the US government.”

Last week during testimony on Capitol Hill, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said US involvement in the sale of Venezuelan oil was a short-term effort aimed at stabilizing the country, keeping the government afloat and helping the people.

“So, in essence, we allowed Venezuela to use their own oil to generate revenue to pay teachers and firefighters and police officers and keep the function of government operating so we didn’t have systemic collapse,” he said.

The funds had been held in Qatar and intended as a “temporary, short-term account to ensure Venezuela received the funds needed to operate,” the US official said.

The official added that the long-term goal for future sales is to move the proceeds “into a fund located in the US and to authorize expenditures for any obligation or expense of the government of Venezuela or its agencies and instrumentalities upon instructions that are consistent with agreed upon procedures.” — Reuters

Pakistan sends helicopters and drones to end desert standoff; 58 dead

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Uzairmaqbool from Pixabay

QUETTA — Pakistan’s security forces used drones and helicopters to wrest control of a southwestern town from separatist insurgents after a three-day battle, police said on Wednesday, as the death toll in the weekend’s violence rose to 58.

Saturday’s wave of coordinated attacks by the separatist Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) brought Pakistan’s largest province to a near standstill as security forces exchanged fire with insurgents in more than a dozen places, killing 197 militants.

“I thought the roof and walls of my house were going to blow up,” said Robina Ali, a housewife living near the main administrative building in the fortified provincial capital of Quetta, where a powerful morning blast rocked the area.

Fighters of the BLA, the region’s strongest insurgent group, stormed schools, banks, markets and security installations across Balochistan in one of their largest operations ever, killing more than 22 security officials and 36 civilians.

Police officials gave details of the situation on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the media.

In the desert town of Nushki, home to about 50,000, the insurgents seized control of the police station and other security installations, triggering a three-day standoff.

Police said seven officers were killed in the fighting before they regained control of the town late on Monday, while operations against the BLA continue elsewhere in the province.

“More troops were sent to Nushki,” said one security official. “Helicopters and drones were used against the militants.”

Pakistan’s interior ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

LATE NIGHT ATTACKS
Pakistan’s largest and poorest province, mineral-rich Balochistan borders Iran and Afghanistan and is home to Beijing’s investment in the Gwadar deepwater port and other projects.

It has grappled with a decades-long insurgency led by ethnic Baloch separatists seeking greater autonomy and a larger share of its natural resources.

The BLA, which has urged people of the province to support the movement, said on Tuesday it had killed 280 soldiers during its Operation “Herof,” Black Storm, but gave no evidence.

Security officials said the weekend attacks began at 4 a.m. on Saturday with suicide blasts in Nushki and the fishing port of Pasni and gun and grenade attacks in 11 more places, including Quetta.

The insurgents seized at least six district administration offices during the siege and had advanced at one point to within 1 kilometer (3,300 feet) of the provincial chief minister’s office in Quetta, the police officials said. — Reuters

Handbags and hashtags: Japan’s Takaichi rides youth-led craze into election

Sanae Takaichi, the newly elected leader of Japan’s ruling party, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), attends a press conference after the LDP presidential election in Tokyo on October 4, 2025. — YUICHI YAMAZAKI/POOL VIA REUTERS

TOKYO — The handbag she carries is sold out, her pink pen has gone viral and even her favorite snacks are in hot demand: Japan’s 64-year-old leader Sanae Takaichi has sparked an unlikely youth-led craze that could propel her to a big election win.

Polls suggest “sanakatsu,” roughly translated as “sanamania,” can help give Japan’s first female prime minister a decisive mandate in Sunday’s general election and unleash the spending plans she has promised will jolt the country’s moribund economy.

Backed by her personal popularity, her ruling coalition could capture as many as 300 seats in the 465-seat lower house, polls this week showed, a remarkable turnaround given her predecessor resigned after losing control of both chambers in ballots over the last 15 months.

What’s perhaps even more surprising is the appeal of the staunchly conservative leader with voters under 30, estimated by one recent poll at over 90%. Her overall popularity stands at around 60%.

Takanori Kobayashi, director at Hamano, the company that makes the $900 black leather bag that Ms. Takaichi regularly totes, says he has been stunned by the young people clamoring to buy the item on a nine-month backlog.

“The bag is usually bought by people in their forties or fifties,” Mr. Kobayashi said at the company’s factory in Nagano, central Japan, where press clippings of the prime minister are pinned to a notice board.

“But since it became well known, probably through social media, we have seen a lot of interest from customers in their twenties and thirties.”

There has been a similar online buzz around the pink ballpoint pen she uses to scribble notes in parliament and the shrimp rice crackers she was seen clutching while riding a train.

SOCIAL MEDIA SAVVY
Ms. Takaichi has built a social media following that dwarfs those of her rivals, both inside her ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and across the opposition. She has about 2.6 million followers on X, compared with around 64,000 for Yoshihiko Noda, leader of the main opposition party.

Ms. Takaichi’s personal approval ratings are almost double that of the LDP, traditionally a male-dominated party, according to a poll released on Monday by public broadcaster NHK.

Her viral posts stand out in Japan’s usually staid politics, such as clips of her drumming to the hit song “Golden” from Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, or serenading Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni with “Happy Birthday” in Italian.

When Ms. Takaichi announced the snap poll on Jan. 19, she cast the vote as a de facto referendum on her leadership and policies, including fiscal expansion and a plan to strengthen defenses to counter China’s growing military might.

“Can you entrust the management of the nation to Sanae Takaichi? I ask the people directly to judge,” she said.

She surprised voters and politicians with an election “to get an endorsement in a way that is actually rather presidential,” said Koichi Nakano, a political science professor at Sophia University in Tokyo.

Ms. Takaichi’s approach has won over Haruka Okuyama, a 32-year-old office worker who attended her first campaign rally in Akihabara, an anime and gaming culture hub in central Tokyo.

“A lot of young people follow social media these days, and I think there’s been an increase in conservative thinking among them,” Ms. Okuyama said, pulling a magazine from her bag that she said she bought because Ms. Takaichi was on the cover.

Perched atop a campaign truck outside Akihabara station, Ms. Takaichi spoke about her modest upbringing outside Japan’s political elite, and covered topics from the cost of hair salons to controlling immigration.

Ms. Takaichi, whose mother was a police officer and father worked at a car company, has said she has drawn inspiration from Margaret Thatcher, the daughter of a shopkeeper who became Britain’s first female and longest-serving modern premier.

“She has a clear, decisive way of speaking,” said Takeo Fujimura, a 24-year-old clerical worker who had volunteered to hand out paper Japanese flags at the event. “She communicates in a bright, positive way and I think that energy resonates with young people.”

‘POWER OF PERSONALITY’
Not everyone at the rally had made up their minds.

Tomomi Kawamura, a 37-year-old housewife, said she admired Ms. Takaichi’s social media savvy, but was undecided on who to vote for. Rising prices were her main worry, she said, echoing concerns among other voters that the yen’s slide — triggered in part by Ms. Takaichi’s promised fiscal largesse — is fueling inflation.

“Prices are so high,” Ms. Kawamura said. “I want something done about that.”

Some analysts question whether enough of the youth the prime minister has attracted will turn out to deliver the landslide that polls predict she will win on Sunday. Younger people have historically been less likely to vote than older generations that have underpinned the LDP’s near unbroken post-war rule.

But even a modest win would underline how her personal appeal has single-handedly revived the fortunes of a party whose long grip on power was slipping fast, said David Boling, a principal at The Asia Group, a strategic advisory firm.

“The power of her personality seems to be transcending politics,” he said. — Reuters

Eala-Tjen secures quarters slot

SEA SISTERS Alex Eala (L) and Janice Tjen — FACEBOOK.COM/MUBADALAABUDHABIOPEN

SEA sisters stun higher-ranked Fernandez-Mladenovic duo

SOUTHEAST Asian (SEA) tennis made its mark in the Middle East as Filipina pride Alexandra “Alex” Eala and Indonesian partner stunned the higher-ranked tandem of Filipina-Canadian Leylah Fernandez and France’s Kristina Mladenovic, 7-5, 3-6, 10-6, in the WTA 500 Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open on Wednesday.

Mses. Eala and Tjen scored the last four points of the marathon duel, breaking away from a deadlock at six to clinch a quarterfinal ticket at the expense of the celebrated duo led by nine-time Grand Slam doubles champion Ms. Mladenovic.

The SEA duo took the victory in one hour and 33 minutes, setting up a clash against either Ukrainian sisters Lyudmyla (WTA doubles No. 31) and Nadiia (doubles No. 63) Kichenok or the second seed tandem of Chinese Shuai Zhang (doubles No.7) and Spaniard Cristina Bucsa (doubles No. 22), for a seat in the final four.

“We are the SEA sisters. Go Southeast Asia,” said the 20-year-old Ms. Eala.

“We just won our first match in our first time playing together. Let’s go SEA,” added Ms. Tjen, 23.

Mses. Eala and Tjen are ranked No. 45 and 47 in the WTA singles but sit lower in the doubles division at No. 136 and No. 68 compared to the 23-year-old Ms. Fernandez (singles No. 25) at No. 80 and the 32-year-old Ms. Mladenovic at No. 55.

Ms. Mladenovic boasts a decorated doubles career, becoming the world No. 1 in 2019 after a six-title run in the Australian Open and French Open women’s doubles as well as three more crowns in the Australian Open and Wimbledon mixed doubles.

But the Filipina-Indonesian pair did not shy away from the pressure and the challenge against the sport’s titan and a rising star in Ms. Fernandez, stealing the first set via tiebreaker, 7-5.

The Canadian-French twain would return the favor in more dominant fashion to force a rubber match, where the youthful Mses. Eala and Tjen broke free in the clutch with a 4-0 closeout marked by Ms. Tjen’s forehand return smash straight to the baseline to break Ms. Fernandez’ serve.

Ms. Eala could make it a double playoff appearance in Abu Dhabi with a Round of 16 duel at press time against the 31-year-old Aliaksandra Sasnovich, WTA No. 109, of Belarus, who pulled off a 6-4, 3-6, 6-1 stunner on world No. 65 and Abu Dhabi’s No. 8 seed Paula Badosa of Spain.

The lefty sensation on Tuesday advanced after taking care of business against close friend and former doubles partner Zeynep Sonmez (WTA No. 79) of Turkey.

Ms. Tjen, for her part, got the boot with a 6-2, 6-2 defeat at the hands of No. 5 seed and WTA No. 18 Liudmila Samsonova of Russia in Round 2. Ms. Tjen previously scored an upset on WTA No. 29 Maya Joint of Australia, 7-6(7-6), 3-6, 6-3.

It was Ms. Joint who denied Ms. Eala a title in the Eastbourne Open finals in England last year. — John Bryan Ulanday

Full strength Creamline Cool Smashers battle tough PLDT High Speed Hitters in All-Filipino tourney

PLDT HIGH SPEED HITTERS — FACEBOOK.COM/PREMIERVOLLEYBALLLEAGUE

Games on Thursday
(FilOil Arena)
4 p.m. – Choco Mucho vs Cignal
6:30 p.m. – Creamline vs PLDT

CREAMLINE sets out to reclaim the PVL All-Filipino Conference title it last won two years ago while PLDT aims to claim its very first one this same stage as they face off on Thursday at the FilOil Arena.

The Creamline Cool Smashers will come in with their first complete lineup in years highlighted by the return of beloved setter Jia de Guzman and power spiker Bernadeth Pons from national team duties as well as Jema Galanza from injury.

They will battle at 6:30 p.m. the Manny V. Pangilinan-owned PLDT High Speed Hitters, who have kept the core that won them their first crowns — the PVL on Tour and Invitational — last year.

“We’re excited we’re complete again,” said Creamline captain Alyssa Valdez, who herself is now in full strength after battling various injuries the last couple of seasons.

Also expected to draw attention is the equally intriguing duel between Choco Mucho and Cignal at 4 p.m.

The Choco Mucho Flying Titans seized an early share of the lead after edging the Akari Chargers, 25-17, 25-23, 25-20, in Saturday’s opener with the dynamic duo of Sisi Rondina and newly acquired Eya Laure wreaking the most damage.

Equally impressive were the Cignal Super Spikers, who overpowered the Galeries Tower Highrisers, 25-17, 25-14, 25-11, that jump started their campaign.

The winner of this duel seizes the solo lead. — Joey Villar

Frayna, Fronda settle for quick draw; Frayna keeps PNWCC lead

RAFAEL REX FELISILDA-UNSPLASH

JANELLE MAE FRAYNA and Jan Jodilyn Fronda, two of the country’s top players, came into their fourth round duel expecting fireworks.

Nothing popped though as Mses. Frayna and Fronda settled for a quick, timid 26-move draw of a Petroff showdown that didn’t alter the Philippine National Women’s Chess Championship (PNWCC) landscape that much after four rounds in Malolos, Bulacan.

That kept Ms. Frayna unflappable at No. 1 with 3.5 points, which was wrapped by three straight victories to start the grinding 15-round tournament dubbed as the “Battle of Women’s Masters” and supported by host city Mayor Christian Natividad and the Philippine Sports Commission.

For Ms. Fronda, she stayed at No. 2 with three points alongside fellow national team staple Bernadette Galas, who also drew her duel with Cherry Ann Mejia in 31 moves of an English showdown.

The duel was far from Ms. Fronda’s daredevil style of play that saw her pulling off a pair of Houdini Acts — one against reigning national champion Ruelle Canino in which she clawed back from the grave and escaped with a draw and another against Allaney Jia Doroy where she was a pawn down before turning it into a miraculous win.

Ms. Canino, slowed down by a draw and a stinging defeat in her first two outings, got back into contention with two wins in a row including a 38-move triumph over Queen Pamplona in 38 moves of a Queen’s Indian duel.

All 16 participants are hoping to snare one of the three berths to the World Chess Olympiad this September in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. — Joey Villar

Tabuena debuts for 4Aces in LIV Golf League

PHILIPPINE ace Miguel Tabuena takes the big stage as he debuts for the 4Aces Golf Club (GC) team in the LIV Golf League.

Tapped as a reserve in the powerhouse squad skippered by two-time major champion Dustin Johnson upon the departure of Patrick Reed, Mr. Tabuena got his first start in the $20-million LIV Golf Riyadh on Wednesday night in Saudi Arabia (Thursday morning in Manila).

Mr. Tabuena is slated to tee off on No. 10 of the Riyadh Golf Club in Group 11, alongside Yosuke Asaji, the Japanese who beat him for the last wild card spot awarded in the International Series, and Ben Campbell of the RangeGoats GC.

Carrying the 4Aces’ banner with Messrs. Tabuena and Johnson, who competed in the International Series Philippines that the Pinoy Olympian ruled, are Belgian debutant Thomas Detry and his compatriot Thomas Pieters.

To be played under the lights for the second straight year, the Riyadh event marks the first in LIV Golf League history to utilize a 72-hole, four-round stroke-play format.

It features a field size of 57 players, the largest in league history, led by defending individual champion Adrian Meronk of Cleeks GC, Jon Rahm of Legion XIII and Joaquin Niemann of Torque GC, the season-long individual champion and runner-up, respectively, of the past two seasons. — Olmin Leyba

NCAA 101: UPHSD Lady Altas blast Lady Cardinals to remain unbeaten

Games on Friday
(San Andres Gym)
9 a.m. – SSC-R vs LPU (Men/Women)
2 p.m. – JRU vs San Beda (Women/Men)

UNIVERSITY of Perpetual Help System Dalta (UPHSD) kept showing strong form as it repulsed Mapúa University, 25-20, 25-21, 25-11, on Wednesday to remain untouchable at the helm in NCAA Season 101 women’s volleyball at the San Andres Gym.

Cyrille Joie Almeniana served as the battering ram and unloaded a match high 18 points including 16 on spikes as the Lady Altas claimed their fourth win in row to remain in pole position in Pool A.

One of those wins came at the expense of reigning four-peat titlist College of St. Benilde in an epic 25-21, 18-25, 25-23, 17-25, 16-14 win last Jan. 25.

And it looked like there’s no stopping the UPHSD freight train as it starts to test Pool B where it will battle Emilio Aguinaldo College (0-3) on Saturday at the same Manila venue.

There, the Sandy Rieta-mentored Las Piñas-based spikers tackle the Colegio de San Juan de Letran Lady Knights, who like them are immaculate in four starts, the San Beda University Red Spikers (3-1), Arellano University Lady Chiefs (1-2), and Lyceum of the Philippine University Lady Pirates (1-3). — Joey Villar