World ParaVolley

World ParaVolley
Formation1981 - 1994 (WOVD) - 2014 (World ParaVolley)
TypeSports federation
HeadquartersLoughborough, England
Membership
66 members
Official language
English
Phil Allen
Websitehttps://www.worldparavolley.org/

World ParaVolley, formerly the World Organization Volleyball for Disabled (WOVD), is an international organization that is for people with physical disabilities. It is affiliated with the International Paralympic Committee (IPC). The World Organization Volleyball for Disabled was established in 1981 and was part of the International Sports Organization for Disabled (ISOD). In 1992 the WOVD became its own separate Organization in Barcelona, Spain. The WOVD Headquarters were also established in the Netherlands.

The WOVD is responsible for managing and controlling the conduct of international volleyball competitions for men, women and youth. The WOVD also liaises with IPC (as an independent organisation) and with other organizations for people with or without disabilities.[1] The organization adopted its present name World ParaVolley at its 2014 general assembly.[2]

History

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As volleyball caught on and became a popular sport and the Olympics became increasingly popular, the paralympic games started coming into play. The first paralympic games were played in 1960 in Rome immediately after the Olympic Games. By 1976, amputees started participating in the paralympics. In 1967 the Dutch introduced a new game called sitting volleyball, which is a combination of sitzball and volleyball. Then in 1978 the ISOD accepted sitting volleyball in its programs. The first official tournament took place in 1979 in Haarlem, Netherlands, and then in 1980 sitting volleyball was accepted as a Paralympic sport with seven players. Since 1993, Sitting Volleyball championships have been organized for men and women.[3] It has become one of the main team-sports in the Paralympic Programme. It is a fast, exciting and crowd pleasing sport, which can show the athletic skills of disabled sportsmen/women.

Standing Volleyball for the Disabled, was played by athletes with disabilities long before the international federation was founded. It has its roots in Great Britain and was originally played only by amputee players. To encourage the participation on those ones with a more severe amputation, a classification system has been set up and players on court must follow certain rules. Teams must respect these classification rules to ensure an equitable team composition. International competitions have taken place since the 1960s, although it was not until 1976 that volleyball was accepted into the Paralympic Games Programme, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Since 1980 volleyball has had a regular international calendar.

Barry Couzner (OAM) of Australia is the current president.[4][5]

Origin

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The game of Volleyball was created by William G. Morgan, a YMCA physical education director, on February 9, 1895, in Holyoke, Massachusetts (USA). When Morgan first created the game of volleyball it was called Minonette. The first rules were written down by Morgan. The game of volleyball was not officially called volleyball until 1896 and was two separate words. As the years went on it later became one word, then a special ball was designed for volleyball in 1900. 64 years later in 1964 Men's and Women's volleyball were introduced as an Olympic sport. Later in 1884 the Men's team won its first Olympic medal and later men's beach volleyball was added as an Olympic sport in 1996.[6]

Members

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66 Nations Member in 30 June 2023:[7][8]

  1. Europe (26): Bosnia & Herzegovina-Croatia-Czechia-Denmark-Estonia-Finland-France-Georgia-Germany-Great Britain-Hungary-Italy-Latvia-Lithuania-Malta-Montenegro-Netherlands-Norway-Poland-Serbia-Slovakia-Slovenia-Türkiye-Ukraine-Russia-Georgia
  2. Asia-Pacific (17): Cambodia-China-I.R. Iran-India-Indonesia-Iraq-Japan-Kazakhstan-Korea-Malaysia-Mongolia-Myanmar-Saudi Arabia-Sri Lanka-Thailand-Vanuatu-Philippines
  3. Americas (13): Argentina-Bolivia-Brazil-Canada-Colombia-Costa Rica-Ecuador-El Salvador-Mexico-Nicaragua-Peru-USA-Venezuela
  4. Africa (10): Algeria-Egypt-Ghana-Morocco-Mozambique-Nigeria-RD Congo-Rwanda-South Africa-Zimbabwe

Types of volleyball

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Sitting volleyball

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Athletics and Sitzball - originating from Germany - were the main sports. Soon it was found that Sitzball, which is played sitting down on the floor, was too passive; more mobile forms of sports were looked for. With Sitting Volleyball, the disability of a player is no longer a handicap. Since players must be sitting on the floor when hitting the ball, only the skill is important, not the disability. This produces a very competitive sport.

In 1956, the Dutch Sports Committee introduced a new game called Sitting Volleyball, a combination of sitzball and volleyball. Since then Sitting Volleyball has grown into one of the biggest sports practised in competition not only by the disabled in the Netherlands, but also by interested "able-bodied" volleyball players with an injury of the ankle or knee.

Sitting Volleyball has the radiation to grow into a sport in which the disabled and non-disabled persons can play on a high technical level.

Sitting Volleyball is played with six players per team on a smaller volleyball court with lowered nets. This version enables double leg amputees and individuals with spinal injuries and various other disabilities to play volleyball. Besides a few rules regarding physical advantages, all nondisabled rules apply.

Standing volleyball

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Standing volleyball which is the only team sport that can be played "standing" by people with physical disabilities. The Amputee athletes have a choice to play with or without prostheses. Depending on the sense of balance, some above the knee amputees will choose to play without a prosthesis hopping on a single leg. Standing volleyball is played on an integrated FIVB rules.

The game of Standing Volleyball decided to allow other disability groups to take part, therefore encouraging more nations to participate. Although this initially created more classification problems, the WOVD finally, after four years, established criteria for classification, which includes those players with various arm or leg disabilities.[9][10]

Beach volleyball

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Beach ParaVolley is a version of standing volleyball that is played on beach courts rather than indoor courts. It is played with three-member teams and works within the Paralympic classification system. Standard FIVB Beach Volleyball rules are followed. The sport is growing, with teams regularly competing in Asia and Oceania since 2007. As of 2018, World ParaVolley is working towards inclusion of Paralympic Beach Volleyball as a medal sport in the Los Angeles games in 2028.[11]

Types:[12]

28th edition of the AeQuilibrium Beach Volley Marathon: in six different categories: Women’s 2×2, Men’s 2×2, Mixed 2×2, Women’s 3×3, Men’s 3×3 and Mixed 4×4.

European Federation

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ParaVolley Europe (PVE)

Members

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1 June 2024:[7]

  1. ASSOCIATION OF SITTING VOLLEYBALL OF BOSNIA & HERZEGOVINA
  2. CROATIAN PARALYMPIC COMMITTEE - CROATIAN PARAVOLLEY FEDERATION
  3. CZECH VOLLEYBALL FEDERATION
  4. PARASPORT DANMARK
  5. EESTI VÕRKPALLI LIIT
  6. FINNISH VOLLEYBALL ASSOCIATION
  7. FEDERATION FRANCAISE DE VOLLEY
  8. GEORGIAN PARALYMPIC COMMITTEE
  9. DEUTSCHER BEHIDERTENSPORVERBAND UND NATIONALES PARALYMPISCHES KOMITEE (DBS) e.V.
  10. HELLENIC SPORT FEDERATION FOR PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES
  11. HUNGARIAN VOLLEYBALL FEDERATION
  12. FEDERAZIONE ITALIANA PALLAVOLO (FIPAV)
  13. KOSOVO PARAVOLLEY FEDERATION
  14. LATVIAN SITTING VOLLEYBALL ASSOCIATION FOR THE DISABLED PEOPLE
  15. LITHUANIA SPORTS FEDERATION FOR THE DISABLED
  16. PARAVOLLEY MALTA
  17. CRNOGORSKI OLIMPIJSKI KOMITET
  18. NEDERLANDSE VOLLEYBALBOND - DUTCH VOLLEYBALL FEDERATION (NEVOBO)
  19. NORWEGIAN VOLLEYBALL FEDERATION
  20. POLISH SPORTS ASSOCIATION FOR THE DISABLED START
  21. RUSSIAN PARALYMPIC COMMITTEE
  22. SERBIA SITTING VOLLEYBALL FEDERATION FOR DISABLED - NPC Serbia
  23. SLOVAK SPORTS ASSOCIATION FOR THE DISABLED
  24. SPORTS FEDERATION FOR THE DISABLED OF SLOVENIA - SLOVENIAN PARALYMPIC COMMITTEE
  25. TURKIYE VOLLEYBALL FEDERATION
  26. UKRAINE FEDERATION OF SPORTS FOR PERSONS WITH LOCOMOTOR DISABILITIES
  27. BRITISH VOLLEYBALL FEDERATION

Results

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Source:[13][14]

  1. Nations Leagues:[15]
  2. Club Competitions:[16]
  3. Sitting Volleyball European Championships:[17]
  4. European Championships Div. B & C:[18]

Sitting Volleyball European Championships

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[19][17][13][14]

Men (1981-2023)

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Bosnia and Herzegovina111214
2 Netherlands5027
3 Russia2529
4 Norway1225
5 Finland1135
6 Hungary1113
7 Germany08614
8 Yugoslavia0202
9 Ukraine0112
10 Sweden0022
Totals (10 entries)21212163

Women (1993-2023)

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Netherlands71311
2 Russia4116
3 Ukraine2428
4 Slovenia13610
5 Italy1203
6 Latvia1102
7 Finland0224
8 Lithuania0202
9 Estonia0011
 Germany0011
Totals (10 entries)16161648

Ranking

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1 June 2024:[20][21]

Men

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Source:[22]

42 Teams

1 I.R. Iran 5500

2 Brazil 4330

3 Egypt 4306

4 Bosnia & Herzegovina 3970

5 Germany 3830

6 Ukraine 2991

7 Kazakhstan 2513

8 China 2511

9 USA 2414

10 Japan 2309

Women

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Source:[23]

30 Teams

1 Canada 4563

2 Brazil 4380

3 USA 4215

4 China 3800

5 Rwanda 3312

6 Slovenia 3277

7 Italy 3115

8 Germany 3083

9 Ukraine 3017

10 Japan 1813

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "wovd.info - wovd Resources and Information". Retrieved 15 June 2016.
  2. ^ "World ParaVolley 2014 General Assembly held in Poland". Retrieved 15 June 2016.
  3. ^ "When sitting is not resting: Sitting Volleyball". Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  4. ^ "U.S. Paralympics - Features, Events, Results - Team USA". Retrieved 15 June 2016.
  5. ^ Thomas, Nigel and Andy Smith. Disability, Sport and Society An Introduction. 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2009
  6. ^ Huff, Richard. The Composite Guide to Volleyball. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publisher, 2000
  7. ^ a b "ParaVolley EUROPE - Sitting & Standing Volleyball in Europe". PVE.
  8. ^ "Membership and Affiliations < World ParaVolley". World ParaVolley. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  9. ^ Mastandrea, Linda and Donna Czubernat. Sports and the Physically Challenged. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-publishication Date, 2006
  10. ^ Paciorek, Michael J and Jeffery A. Jones. Sports and recreation for the Disabled 2nd Edition. United States of America: Masters Press, 1994
  11. ^ "Beach ParaVolley < World ParaVolley". World ParaVolley. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  12. ^ "2023 AeQuilibrium Beach Volley Marathon – an even more inclusive Beach Volleyball event!". Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  13. ^ a b "Roll of Honour". PVE.
  14. ^ a b "Previous Years". PVE.
  15. ^ "Nations Leagues - Roll of Honour" (PDF). api.website.paravolley.eu. 2024-05-27.
  16. ^ "Club Competitions - Roll of Honour" (PDF). api.website.paravolley.eu. 2024-05-20.
  17. ^ a b "Sitting Volleyball - European Championships" (PDF). api.website.paravolley.eu. 2024-05-13.
  18. ^ "European Championships - Div. B & C - Roll of Honour" (PDF). api.website.paravolley.eu. 2024-05-12.
  19. ^ Kwok Ng (26 September 2016). "Major Competitions". www.sittingvolleyball.info. Retrieved 26 September 2016.
  20. ^ "Sitting Volleyball Rankings < World ParaVolley".
  21. ^ "World ParaVolley Ranking Points - Calculation System -" (PDF). worldparavolley.org.
  22. ^ "Rolling Rankings - Men" (PDF). worldparavolley.org. 2024-03-01.
  23. ^ "Rolling Rankings - Women" (PDF). worldparavolley.org. 2024-03-01.
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