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FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship

The FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship is an international volleyball competition contested by the senior men's national teams of the members of Fédération Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), the sport's global governing body. The initial gap between championships was variable, but since 1962 they have been held every four years. The current champion is Italy, who won their fourth title at the 2022 tournament, defeating Poland in the final.

FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship
Most recent season or competition:
2022 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship
SportVolleyball
Founded1949; 74 years ago (1949)
Inaugural season1949
CEOAry Graça
No. of teams24 (finals)
ContinentInternational (FIVB)
Most recent
champion(s)
 Italy
(4th title)
Most titles Soviet Union
(6 titles)
Streaming partner(s)Volleyball TV (since 2018)
Official websiteVolleyball World Championship

The current format of the competition involves a qualification phase, which currently takes place over the preceding three years, to determine which teams qualify for the tournament phase, which is often called the World Championship Finals. The former format was 24 teams, including the automatically qualifying host nation(s), compete in the tournament phase for the title at venues within the host nation(s) over a period of about a month.

On 15 October 2022, FIVB announced the expansion of World Championships and the changes to the competition formula. A total of 32 teams are to compete for future editions of the tournament.[1]

The 20 World Championship tournaments have been won by seven different national teams: the Soviet Union six times; Italy four times; Brazil and Poland three times each; Czechoslovakia twice; and East Germany and the United States, once each.

History

Origins

The history of the World Championship goes back to the beginnings of volleyball as a professional, high level sport. One of the first concrete measures taken by the FIVB after its foundation in 1947 was the establishment of an international competition involving teams from more than one continent. In 1949, the first edition was played in Prague, Czechoslovakia. At that point, the tournament was still restricted to Europe.

Three years later, the event was expanded to include nations from Asia, and began to be held in 4-year cycles. By the following edition, there were also teams from South, Central and North America.

Since volleyball was to be added to the Olympic Program in 1964, the 4-cycles were advanced in 2 years after the fourth edition (1960), so that the World Championship may alternate with the Summer Olympic Games. As of 1970, teams from Africa also took part in the competition, and the original goal of having members from all five continental confederations in the games was achieved.

The number of teams involved in the games has changed significantly over the years. Following volleyball's increase in popularity, they raised steadily to over 20 in the 1970s and part of the 1980s, were then cut short to 16 in the 1990s, and finally set up in 24 after 2002. Today, the World Championship is the most comprehensive of all events organized by the FIVB, and arguably the most important, alongside the Olympic Games.[2]

Until 1974, the host nation of the tournament organized both the men's and the women's events, with the single exception of the 1966/1967 games, which took place in different years. Since 1978, this practice has been only occasionally observed, for instance, in 1998 and in the 2006 edition, which was held, as the former was, in Japan.

Winners

The history of the World Championship clearly demonstrates how volleyball was originally dominated by European nations.

The first two editions were won by the Soviet Union. In 1956, twice runner-up Czechoslovakia took the gold. There followed two more consecutive wins for the Soviet Union, in both cases over Czechoslovakia. The Czechs won a gold medal in the 1966 edition.

In 1970, East Germany prevailed over Bulgaria for their first and only title. In 1974, the Soviet Union threatened to take the lead once more, but ended up being defeated by Poland at the final. Nevertheless, they would confirm their leadership by winning, for the third time, two editions in a row.

1986 saw the first relevant confrontation between United States, the rising major force of the decade, and the traditional leader Soviet Union after the Olympic boycotts of 1980 and 1984. As would be the case two years later at the Seoul Olympic Games, the issue was settled in favour of the Americans led by Karch Kiraly and Steve Timmons. Italy completely dominated the competition in the 1990s, winning all the editions that took place in this decade (1990, 1994, 1998), led by such players as Lorenzo Bernardi and Andrea Giani.

In the 2000s, Brazil became the leading force in the sport, also winning three consecutive editions (2002, 2006 and 2010), the first of which in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the same stage where the Brazilians had been runners-up in 1982. In 2014, hosts Poland defeated Brazil in four sets at the final, achieving their second gold medal and preventing what would have been a historic fourth title in a row. In 2018, Poland won a second consecutive title, again defeating Brazil in the final. In 2022, Poland, playing at home, missed the opportunity to win three consecutive editions by losing in the final to Italy, who won their fourth World title.

As of 2022, 20 editions of the men's Volleyball World Championship have been played: 16 went to European teams, and four to American teams (three times to Brazil and once to the United States).

Competition formula

Qualification

See also pages in category FIVB Volleyball World Championship qualification.

Final tournament

The competition formula of the FIVB World Championship has been constantly changed to fit the different number of teams that participate in each edition. The following rules usually apply:

  • Twenty-four teams participate in each event.
  • Qualification procedures for the World Championship are long and strenuous, lasting over two years.
  • Host nations are always pre-qualified.
  • The number of spots available per confederation is determined by the FIVB: Europe has usually the highest, and Africa or South America the lowest.
  • To participate in the event, a team must survive a number of qualification tournaments depending on its position in the FIVB World Rankings. Low-ranked teams may have to engage in up to three tournaments to be granted a berth; high-ranked teams typically play only one.
  • The competition is divided in at least two phases: a preliminary round and a final round. Depending on the number of participating teams, one or more intermediary rounds may also be required.
  • In the preliminary round, teams are organized in pools. Each team plays one match against all other teams in its pool.
  • When all the matches of the preliminary round have been played, the top n teams in each pool qualify for the following round(s), and the remaining ones leave the competition. The value of n depends on the number of participating teams and the format that will be employed in the finals.
  • The FIVB has tried various different formats for the final round(s). For some years now (2004), there seems to be a consensus that at least semifinals and finals must be played according to the Olympic format.
  • Quarterfinals may consist of groups of teams playing against each other, or of direct confrontation; in the latter case additional intermediary rounds might be required to reduce the number of surviving teams to eight.
  • The tournament now implements a line-up of fourteen players, and four reserve players in case of injuries.

New formula

A totally brand new competition formula was announced by FIVB. A total of 32 teams will compete in the World Championship. The teams will be divided into 8 groups of 4 teams for the round-robin phase with 2 best teams per group moving into the direct knockout phase: round of 16, quarterfinals, semi-finals and final.[1]

Results summary

Year Host Final 3rd place match Teams
Champions Score Runners-up 3rd place Score 4th place
1949
Details
 
Czechoslovakia
 
Soviet Union
Round-robin
(3–1)
 
Czechoslovakia
 
Bulgaria
Round-robin
(3–1)
 
Romania
10
1952
Details
 
Soviet Union
 
Soviet Union
Round-robin
(3–0)
 
Czechoslovakia
 
Bulgaria
Round-robin
(3–1)
 
Romania
11
1956
Details
 
France
 
Czechoslovakia
Round-robin
(3–2)
 
Romania
 
Soviet Union
Round-robin
(3–1)
 
Poland
24
1960
Details
 
Brazil
 
Soviet Union
Round-robin
(3–0)
 
Czechoslovakia
 
Romania
Round-robin
(3–1)
 
Poland
14
1962
Details
 
Soviet Union
 
Soviet Union
Round-robin
(3–0)
 
Czechoslovakia
 
Romania
Round-robin
(2–3)
 
Bulgaria
21
1966
Details
 
Czechoslovakia
 
Czechoslovakia
Round-robin
(3–1)
 
Romania
 
Soviet Union
Round-robin
(3–0)
 
East Germany
22
1970
Details
 
Bulgaria
 
East Germany
Round-robin
(3–2)
 
Bulgaria
 
Japan
Round-robin
(3–0)
 
Czechoslovakia
24
1974
Details
 
Mexico
 
Poland
Round-robin
(3–2)
 
Soviet Union
 
Japan
Round-robin
(3–1)
 
East Germany
24
1978
Details
 
Italy
 
Soviet Union
3–0  
Italy
 
Cuba
3–1  
South Korea
24
1982
Details
 
Argentina
 
Soviet Union
3–0  
Brazil
 
Argentina
3–0  
Japan
24
1986
Details
 
France
 
United States
3–1  
Soviet Union
 
Bulgaria
3–0  
Brazil
16
1990
Details
 
Brazil
 
Italy
3–1  
Cuba
 
Soviet Union
3–0  
Brazil
16
1994
Details
 
Greece
 
Italy
3–1  
Netherlands
 
United States
3–1  
Cuba
16
1998
Details
 
Japan
 
Italy
3–0  
FR Yugoslavia
 
Cuba
3–1  
Brazil
24
2002
Details
 
Argentina
 
Brazil
3–2  
Russia
 
France
3–0  
FR Yugoslavia
24
2006
Details
 
Japan
 
Brazil
3–0  
Poland
 
Bulgaria
3–1  
Serbia and Montenegro
24
2010
Details
 
Italy
 
Brazil
3–0  
Cuba
 
Serbia
3–1  
Italy
24
2014
Details
 
Poland
 
Poland
3–1  
Brazil
 
Germany
3–0  
France
24
2018
Details
   
Italy / Bulgaria
 
Poland
3–0  
Brazil
 
United States
3–1  
Serbia
24
2022
Details
   
Poland / Slovenia
 
Italy
3–1  
Poland
 
Brazil
3–1  
Slovenia
24

Medals summary

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Soviet Union62311
2  Italy4105
3  Brazil3317
4  Poland3205
5  Czechoslovakia2406
6  United States1023
7  East Germany1001
8  Cuba0224
  Romania0224
10  Bulgaria0145
11  FR Yugoslavia0101
  Netherlands0101
  Russia0101
14  Japan0022
15  Argentina0011
  France0011
  Germany0011
  Serbia0011
Totals (18 entries)20202060

Hosts

List of hosts by number of championships hosted.

Times hosted Nations Year(s)
3   Italy 1978, 2010, 2018*
2   Poland 2014, 2022*
  Argentina 1982, 2002
  Brazil 1960, 1990
  Bulgaria 1970, 2018*
  Czechoslovakia 1949, 1966
  France 1956, 1986
  Japan 1998, 2006
  Soviet Union 1952, 1962
1   Greece 1994
  Mexico 1974
  Slovenia 2022*
* = co-hosts.

MVP by edition

Most successful players

Boldface denotes active volleyball players and highest medal count among all players (including these who not included in these tables) per type.

Multiple gold medalists

Rank Player Country From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Marco Bracci   Italy 1990 1998 3 3
Dante Amaral   Brazil 2002 2010 3 3
Ferdinando De Giorgi   Italy 1990 1998 3 3
Andrea Gardini   Italy 1990 1998 3 3
Andrea Giani   Italy 1990 1998 3 3
Gilberto "Giba" Godoy Filho   Brazil 2002 2010 3 3
Rodrigão Santana   Brazil 2002 2010 3 3
8 Josef Musil   Czechoslovakia 1952 1966 2 3 5
9 Bohumil Golián   Czechoslovakia 1956 1966 2 2 4
Vyacheslav Zaytsev   Soviet Union 1974 1986 2 2 4

Multiple medalists

The table shows players who have won at least 4 medals in total at the World Championships.

Rank Player Country From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Josef Musil   Czechoslovakia 1952 1966 2 3 5
2 Bohumil Golián   Czechoslovakia 1956 1966 2 2 4
Vyacheslav Zaytsev   Soviet Union 1974 1986 2 2 4
4 Jaromír Paldus   Czechoslovakia 1949 1960 1 3 4
5 Bruno Rezende   Brazil 2010 2022 1 2 1 4
Lucas Saatkamp   Brazil 2010 2022 1 2 1 4
7 Gheorghe Corbeanu   Romania 1956 1966 2 2 4
Eduard Derzsei   Romania 1956 1966 2 2 4
Horaţiu Nicolau   Romania 1956 1966 2 2 4

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "FIVB Volleyball World Championships To Expand To 32-Teams Per Gender And Enhance Competition Formula". 15 October 2022.
  2. ^ Competition introduction.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Volleyball World Championship History

fivb, volleyball, world, championship, international, volleyball, competition, contested, senior, national, teams, members, fédération, internationale, volleyball, fivb, sport, global, governing, body, initial, between, championships, variable, since, 1962, th. The FIVB Volleyball Men s World Championship is an international volleyball competition contested by the senior men s national teams of the members of Federation Internationale de Volleyball FIVB the sport s global governing body The initial gap between championships was variable but since 1962 they have been held every four years The current champion is Italy who won their fourth title at the 2022 tournament defeating Poland in the final FIVB Volleyball Men s World ChampionshipMost recent season or competition 2022 FIVB Volleyball Men s World ChampionshipSportVolleyballFounded1949 74 years ago 1949 Inaugural season1949CEOAry GracaNo of teams24 finals ContinentInternational FIVB Most recentchampion s Italy 4th title Most titles Soviet Union 6 titles Streaming partner s Volleyball TV since 2018 Official websiteVolleyball World ChampionshipThe current format of the competition involves a qualification phase which currently takes place over the preceding three years to determine which teams qualify for the tournament phase which is often called the World Championship Finals The former format was 24 teams including the automatically qualifying host nation s compete in the tournament phase for the title at venues within the host nation s over a period of about a month On 15 October 2022 FIVB announced the expansion of World Championships and the changes to the competition formula A total of 32 teams are to compete for future editions of the tournament 1 The 20 World Championship tournaments have been won by seven different national teams the Soviet Union six times Italy four times Brazil and Poland three times each Czechoslovakia twice and East Germany and the United States once each Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Winners 2 Competition formula 2 1 Qualification 2 2 Final tournament 2 3 New formula 3 Results summary 4 Medals summary 5 Hosts 6 MVP by edition 7 Most successful players 7 1 Multiple gold medalists 7 2 Multiple medalists 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit The history of the World Championship goes back to the beginnings of volleyball as a professional high level sport One of the first concrete measures taken by the FIVB after its foundation in 1947 was the establishment of an international competition involving teams from more than one continent In 1949 the first edition was played in Prague Czechoslovakia At that point the tournament was still restricted to Europe Three years later the event was expanded to include nations from Asia and began to be held in 4 year cycles By the following edition there were also teams from South Central and North America Since volleyball was to be added to the Olympic Program in 1964 the 4 cycles were advanced in 2 years after the fourth edition 1960 so that the World Championship may alternate with the Summer Olympic Games As of 1970 teams from Africa also took part in the competition and the original goal of having members from all five continental confederations in the games was achieved The number of teams involved in the games has changed significantly over the years Following volleyball s increase in popularity they raised steadily to over 20 in the 1970s and part of the 1980s were then cut short to 16 in the 1990s and finally set up in 24 after 2002 Today the World Championship is the most comprehensive of all events organized by the FIVB and arguably the most important alongside the Olympic Games 2 Until 1974 the host nation of the tournament organized both the men s and the women s events with the single exception of the 1966 1967 games which took place in different years Since 1978 this practice has been only occasionally observed for instance in 1998 and in the 2006 edition which was held as the former was in Japan Winners Edit The history of the World Championship clearly demonstrates how volleyball was originally dominated by European nations The first two editions were won by the Soviet Union In 1956 twice runner up Czechoslovakia took the gold There followed two more consecutive wins for the Soviet Union in both cases over Czechoslovakia The Czechs won a gold medal in the 1966 edition In 1970 East Germany prevailed over Bulgaria for their first and only title In 1974 the Soviet Union threatened to take the lead once more but ended up being defeated by Poland at the final Nevertheless they would confirm their leadership by winning for the third time two editions in a row 1986 saw the first relevant confrontation between United States the rising major force of the decade and the traditional leader Soviet Union after the Olympic boycotts of 1980 and 1984 As would be the case two years later at the Seoul Olympic Games the issue was settled in favour of the Americans led by Karch Kiraly and Steve Timmons Italy completely dominated the competition in the 1990s winning all the editions that took place in this decade 1990 1994 1998 led by such players as Lorenzo Bernardi and Andrea Giani In the 2000s Brazil became the leading force in the sport also winning three consecutive editions 2002 2006 and 2010 the first of which in Buenos Aires Argentina the same stage where the Brazilians had been runners up in 1982 In 2014 hosts Poland defeated Brazil in four sets at the final achieving their second gold medal and preventing what would have been a historic fourth title in a row In 2018 Poland won a second consecutive title again defeating Brazil in the final In 2022 Poland playing at home missed the opportunity to win three consecutive editions by losing in the final to Italy who won their fourth World title As of 2022 20 editions of the men s Volleyball World Championship have been played 16 went to European teams and four to American teams three times to Brazil and once to the United States Competition formula EditQualification Edit See also pages in category FIVB Volleyball World Championship qualification Previous qualificationConfederation SlotsCAVB Africa 2AVC Asia and Oceania 4CEV Europe 8NORCECA North America 6CSV South America 2Total 24 22 H C New qualificationConfederation SlotsCAVB Africa 2AVC Asia and Oceania 2CEV Europe 2NORCECA North America 2CSV South America 2World ranked non qualified teams 12Total 24 22 H C Final tournament Edit The competition formula of the FIVB World Championship has been constantly changed to fit the different number of teams that participate in each edition The following rules usually apply Twenty four teams participate in each event Qualification procedures for the World Championship are long and strenuous lasting over two years Host nations are always pre qualified The number of spots available per confederation is determined by the FIVB Europe has usually the highest and Africa or South America the lowest To participate in the event a team must survive a number of qualification tournaments depending on its position in the FIVB World Rankings Low ranked teams may have to engage in up to three tournaments to be granted a berth high ranked teams typically play only one The competition is divided in at least two phases a preliminary round and a final round Depending on the number of participating teams one or more intermediary rounds may also be required In the preliminary round teams are organized in pools Each team plays one match against all other teams in its pool When all the matches of the preliminary round have been played the top n teams in each pool qualify for the following round s and the remaining ones leave the competition The value of n depends on the number of participating teams and the format that will be employed in the finals The FIVB has tried various different formats for the final round s For some years now 2004 there seems to be a consensus that at least semifinals and finals must be played according to the Olympic format Quarterfinals may consist of groups of teams playing against each other or of direct confrontation in the latter case additional intermediary rounds might be required to reduce the number of surviving teams to eight The tournament now implements a line up of fourteen players and four reserve players in case of injuries New formula Edit A totally brand new competition formula was announced by FIVB A total of 32 teams will compete in the World Championship The teams will be divided into 8 groups of 4 teams for the round robin phase with 2 best teams per group moving into the direct knockout phase round of 16 quarterfinals semi finals and final 1 Results summary EditSee also National team appearances in the FIVB Volleyball Men s World Championship Year Host Final 3rd place match TeamsChampions Score Runners up 3rd place Score 4th place1949Details Czechoslovakia Soviet Union Round robin 3 1 Czechoslovakia Bulgaria Round robin 3 1 Romania 101952Details Soviet Union Soviet Union Round robin 3 0 Czechoslovakia Bulgaria Round robin 3 1 Romania 111956Details France Czechoslovakia Round robin 3 2 Romania Soviet Union Round robin 3 1 Poland 241960Details Brazil Soviet Union Round robin 3 0 Czechoslovakia Romania Round robin 3 1 Poland 141962Details Soviet Union Soviet Union Round robin 3 0 Czechoslovakia Romania Round robin 2 3 Bulgaria 211966Details Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia Round robin 3 1 Romania Soviet Union Round robin 3 0 East Germany 221970Details Bulgaria East Germany Round robin 3 2 Bulgaria Japan Round robin 3 0 Czechoslovakia 241974Details Mexico Poland Round robin 3 2 Soviet Union Japan Round robin 3 1 East Germany 241978Details Italy Soviet Union 3 0 Italy Cuba 3 1 South Korea 241982Details Argentina Soviet Union 3 0 Brazil Argentina 3 0 Japan 241986Details France United States 3 1 Soviet Union Bulgaria 3 0 Brazil 161990Details Brazil Italy 3 1 Cuba Soviet Union 3 0 Brazil 161994Details Greece Italy 3 1 Netherlands United States 3 1 Cuba 161998Details Japan Italy 3 0 FR Yugoslavia Cuba 3 1 Brazil 242002Details Argentina Brazil 3 2 Russia France 3 0 FR Yugoslavia 242006Details Japan Brazil 3 0 Poland Bulgaria 3 1 Serbia and Montenegro 242010Details Italy Brazil 3 0 Cuba Serbia 3 1 Italy 242014Details Poland Poland 3 1 Brazil Germany 3 0 France 242018Details Italy Bulgaria Poland 3 0 Brazil United States 3 1 Serbia 242022Details Poland Slovenia Italy 3 1 Poland Brazil 3 1 Slovenia 24Medals summary EditRankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal1 Soviet Union623112 Italy41053 Brazil33174 Poland32055 Czechoslovakia24066 United States10237 East Germany10018 Cuba0224 Romania022410 Bulgaria014511 FR Yugoslavia0101 Netherlands0101 Russia010114 Japan002215 Argentina0011 France0011 Germany0011 Serbia0011Totals 18 entries 20202060Hosts EditList of hosts by number of championships hosted Times hosted Nations Year s 3 Italy 1978 2010 2018 2 Poland 2014 2022 Argentina 1982 2002 Brazil 1960 1990 Bulgaria 1970 2018 Czechoslovakia 1949 1966 France 1956 1986 Japan 1998 2006 Soviet Union 1952 19621 Greece 1994 Mexico 1974 Slovenia 2022 co hosts MVP by edition Edit1949 66 Not awarded 1970 Rudi Schumann GDR 1974 Stanislaw Gosciniak POL 1978 Not awarded 1982 Vyacheslav Zaytsev USSR 1986 Philippe Blain FRA 1990 Andrea Lucchetta ITA 1994 Lorenzo Bernardi ITA 1998 Rafael Pascual ESP 2002 Marcos Milinkovic ARG 2006 Gilberto Godoy Filho BRA 2010 Murilo Endres BRA 2014 Mariusz Wlazly POL 2018 Bartosz Kurek POL 2022 Simone Giannelli ITA Most successful players EditBoldface denotes active volleyball players and highest medal count among all players including these who not included in these tables per type Multiple gold medalists Edit Rank Player Country From To Gold Silver Bronze Total1 Marco Bracci Italy 1990 1998 3 3Dante Amaral Brazil 2002 2010 3 3Ferdinando De Giorgi Italy 1990 1998 3 3Andrea Gardini Italy 1990 1998 3 3Andrea Giani Italy 1990 1998 3 3Gilberto Giba Godoy Filho Brazil 2002 2010 3 3Rodrigao Santana Brazil 2002 2010 3 38 Josef Musil Czechoslovakia 1952 1966 2 3 59 Bohumil Golian Czechoslovakia 1956 1966 2 2 4Vyacheslav Zaytsev Soviet Union 1974 1986 2 2 4Multiple medalists Edit The table shows players who have won at least 4 medals in total at the World Championships Rank Player Country From To Gold Silver Bronze Total1 Josef Musil Czechoslovakia 1952 1966 2 3 52 Bohumil Golian Czechoslovakia 1956 1966 2 2 4Vyacheslav Zaytsev Soviet Union 1974 1986 2 2 44 Jaromir Paldus Czechoslovakia 1949 1960 1 3 45 Bruno Rezende Brazil 2010 2022 1 2 1 4Lucas Saatkamp Brazil 2010 2022 1 2 1 47 Gheorghe Corbeanu Romania 1956 1966 2 2 4Eduard Derzsei Romania 1956 1966 2 2 4Horaţiu Nicolau Romania 1956 1966 2 2 4See also Edit Volleyball portal Sports portalVolleyball at the Summer Olympics FIVB Volleyball Women s World Championship FIVB Volleyball Men s World Cup FIVB Volleyball World Grand Champions Cup FIVB Volleyball World League FIVB Volleyball Men s Nations League FIVB Volleyball Men s U23 World Championship FIVB Volleyball Men s U21 World Championship FIVB Volleyball Boys U19 World Championship List of Indoor Volleyball World MedalistsReferences Edit a b FIVB Volleyball World Championships To Expand To 32 Teams Per Gender And Enhance Competition Formula 15 October 2022 Competition introduction External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to FIVB Men s World Championship Official website Volleyball World Championship History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FIVB Volleyball Men 27s World Championship amp oldid 1131355724, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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