2018_FIVB_Volleyball_Women's_World_Championship

2018 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship

2018 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship

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The 2018 FIVB Women's World Championship was the eighteenth edition of the event, contested by the senior women's national teams of the members of the Fédération Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), the sport's global governing body. The final tournament was held in Japan from 29 September to 20 October 2018. The final four was held at the Yokohama Arena in Yokohama.[1]

Quick Facts バレーボール女子世界選手権, Tournament details ...

Serbia won their first world title, defeating Italy in five sets at the final.[2][3] This was the first all-European final in the Women's World Championship history and the first final since 1990 that not featured a team from the Americas. Reigning olympic champions China won the third place match, defeating Netherlands in straight sets.[4] For the first time since the 1974 Championship in Mexico, no team from the Americas reached the final four. Tijana Bošković from Serbia was elected the MVP.[5]

Host selection

On 25 August 2014, FIVB announced that the tournament would be held in Japan for the third time in twelve years and the fifth time overall.[1] The tournament will take place in six cities: Hamamatsu, Kobe, Nagoya, Osaka, Sapporo, and Yokohama.

Japan hosted the Women's World Championship on four previous occasions: 1967, 1998, 2006, and 2010. Moreover, Japan also hosted the Men's World Championship in 1998 and 2006. The country has also played hosts to other important volleyball competitions, including the Asian Women's Volleyball Championship and the World Grand Prix final round.

Qualification

The qualification process was a series of tournaments organised by the five FIVB confederations to decide 22 of the 24 teams which would play in the final tournament, with Japan qualifying automatically as hosts and United States also qualifying automatically as the defending champions. All remaining FIVB member associations were eligible to enter the qualifying process.

At first, 160 associations registered teams to compete in the qualification process, but 46 associations withdrew from the qualifying process after they registered and India were suspended and then expelled from taking part in the process as a punishment for internal problems in the India Volleyball Federation.[citation needed]

The five regional governing bodies were allocated the remaining 22 spots; CAVB (Africa) was granted two, AVC (Asia and Oceania) four, NORCECA (North America) six, CSV (South America) two, and CEV (Europe) eight spots.[6]

Of the 24 nations qualified to play at the 2018 World Championship, 21 countries competed at the previous tournament in 2014. Trinidad and Tobago qualified for the first time. Other teams returning after absences of the last tournament(s) include Kenya and South Korea, who both missed the 2014 edition.

More information Country, Confederation ...
Notes
1 Competed as SFR Yugoslavia in 1978 and as Serbia and Montenegro (FR Yugoslavia) in 2006; 3rd appearance as Serbia.
2 Competed as Soviet Union from 1952 to 1990; 7th appearance as Russia.
3 Competed separately as East and West Germany from 1956 to 1990; 7th appearance as Unified Germany.

Squads

Venues

More information Pool A, Final round, Pool B ...

Format

First round

In the first round, the 24 teams are spread across four pools of six teams playing in a round-robin system. The top four teams from each pool advance to the second round.

Second round

In the second round, the 16 teams are allocated in two pools of eight teams (top teams from first round pools A and D in one and top teams from pools B and C in the other). Once again a round-robin system is used in each pool, teams coming from the same first round pool (therefore already played each other) only play against opponents from a different first round pool. The second round standings takes into account the points scored by each team in the first and second rounds. The top three teams of each group will access the third round.

Third round

The six teams competing in the third round are divided into two three-team pools by a draw, with the first place teams from the previous round securing the head position of both pools. After the matches played once again in a round-robin system, the top two in each pool qualify for the semifinals and finals while the third placed teams from each pool play a fifth place match.

Final round

The third round pool winners play against the runners-up in this round. The semifinals winners advance to compete for the World Championship title. The losers face each other in the third place match.

Pools composition

First round

Teams were seeded in the first two positions of each pool following the Serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of 7 August 2017.[7] FIVB reserved the right to seed the hosts as heads of pool A regardless of the World Ranking. All teams not seeded were drawn to take other available positions in the remaining lines following the World Ranking.[8][9] Each pool had no more than three teams from the same confederation. The draw was held in Tokyo, Japan on 7 December 2017. Rankings as of 7 August 2017 are shown in brackets, except the hosts Japan who ranked sixth.

More information Seeded Teams, Pool A ...
Draw

Second round

More information Pool E, Pool F ...

Third round

Third round draw took place at Nippon Gaishi Hall, Nagoya on 11 October 2018.[10]

More information Pool G, Pool H ...

Pool standing procedure

  1. Total number of victories (matches won, matches lost)
  2. In the event of a tie, the following first tiebreaker will apply: The teams will be ranked by the most point gained per match as follows:
    • Match won 3–0 or 3–1: 3 points for the winner, 0 points for the loser
    • Match won 3–2: 2 points for the winner, 1 point for the loser
    • Match forfeited: 3 points for the winner, 0 points (0–25, 0–25, 0–25) for the loser
  3. If teams are still tied after examining the number of victories and points gained, then the FIVB will examine the results in order to break the tie in the following order:
    • Set quotient: if two or more teams are tied on the number of points gained, they will be ranked by the quotient resulting from the division of the number of all set won by the number of all sets lost.
    • Points quotient: if the tie persists based on the set quotient, the teams will be ranked by the quotient resulting from the division of all points scored by the total of points lost during all sets.
    • If the tie persists based on the point quotient, the tie will be broken based on the team that won the match of the Round Robin Phase between the tied teams. When the tie in point quotient is between three or more teams, these teams ranked taking into consideration only the matches involving the teams in question.

Results

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+09:00).

First round

Pool A

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: [citation needed]
More information Date, Time ...

Pool B

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: [citation needed]
More information Date, Time ...

Pool C

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Source: [citation needed]
More information Date, Time ...

Pool D

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: [citation needed]
More information Date, Time ...

Second round

Pool E

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: [citation needed]
More information Date, Time ...

Pool F

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: [citation needed]
More information Date, Time ...

Third round

Pool G

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: [citation needed]
More information Date, Time ...

Pool H

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: [citation needed]
More information Date, Time ...

Final round

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
19 October
 
 
 Serbia 3
 
20 October
 
 Netherlands 1
 
 Serbia 3
 
19 October
 
 Italy 2
 
 China 2
 
 
 Italy 3
 
3rd place
 
 
20 October
 
 
 Netherlands 0
 
 
 China 3

Semifinals

More information Date, Time ...

5th place match

More information Date, Time ...

3rd place match

More information Date, Time ...

Final

More information Date, Time ...

Final standing

Awards

Statistics leaders

The statistics of each group follows the vis reports P2 and P3. The statistics include 6 volleyball skills; serve, reception, set, spike, block, and dig. The table below shows the top 5 ranked players in each skill plus top scorers at the completion of the tournament.[11] Only players whose teams advanced to the third round are taken in consideration.[citation needed]

More information Best Scorers, Player ...
More information Best Blockers, Player ...
More information Best Setters, Player ...
More information Best Receivers, Player ...

Marketing

Sponsors

Local performance

According to Japan leading news paper 朝日新聞, the two Japanese local business partner were reported to lost money on hosting the competition. TBS is expected to lose nearly 1 billion yen due to bad sales at commercial advertisements. And JVA was expected to lose 600 million yen as the drop of ticket selling.[14]

Broadcasting

FIVB, through several companies, sold the broadcasting rights for the 2018 World Championship[15] to the following broadcasters.

More information Country/Region, Broadcaster ...

See also


References

  1. "2018 Women's World Championship broadcasting deal agreed with TBS". Fivb.org. 25 August 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  2. "FIVB – EVENT REGULATIONS – Volleyball" (PDF). FIVB. 5 May 2017. pp. 12–13. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
  3. "Third round draw". FIVB. Retrieved 11 October 2018.
  4. "Statistics". FIVB.org. 20 October 2018.
  5. "Spike, Set, Sponsorship: FIVB & the 2018 Women's World Championship". Tandem Partnerships. 2018-10-18. Retrieved 2020-10-09.
  6. "WhereToWatch". Retrieved 10 September 2018.

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