This article describes the qualification for the 2019 Women's European Volleyball Championship.[1]
Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Turkey as host nations were directly qualified. The eight best placed teams at the 2017 edition also gained direct entries into the tournament.24 teams had registered for participation and compete for the remaining 12 places at the final tournament. The 24 teams were divided into six groups of four teams. The group winners and runners-up will advance to the final round.
width=30% | Means of qualification | width=20% | Qualifier | Means of qualification | width=20% | Qualifier |
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Host Countries | Qualification | Pool A | ||||
Pool B | ||||||
2017 European Championship | Pool C | |||||
Pool D | ||||||
Pool E | ||||||
Pool F | ||||||
Total 24 |
2017 Women's European Volleyball Championship final standings
width=10px bgcolor=#ccffcc | Qualified for 2019 Women's European Volleyball Championship | ||
width=10px bgcolor=#87ceeb | Qualified for 2019 Women's European Volleyball Championship as host countries |
width=40 | Rank | width=180 | Team |
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4 | |||
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9 | |||
10 | |||
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12 | |||
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16 | |||
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There being six pools of four teams each, the winners and runners-up of each pool will qualify for the 2019 Women’s EuroVolley. The groups will be played in a home and away round-robin format from August 2018 to January 2019. The pool composition results from the latest European Ranking for men’s and women’s national teams – as of September 4 and October 2, 2017, respectively – with teams being placed across the pools according to the serpentine system.
Match won 3–0 or 3–1: 3 match points for the winner, 0 match points for the loser
Match won 3–2: 2 match points for the winner, 1 match point for the loser