National Invitational Volleyball Championship | |
Pixels: | 200px |
Sport: | College Volleyball |
Founded: | 1989 |
Teams: | 32 |
Champion: | Wichita State (2023) |
Most Champs: | Wisconsin (2) |
Website: | http://www.womensnivc.com |
Tv: | ESPN3 |
Related Comps: | NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Championship |
Founder: | American Volleyball Coaches Association |
The National Invitational Volleyball Championship is an NCAA Division I women's college volleyball postseason tournament sponsored by the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) and operated by Triple Crown Sports. Its original incarnation ran from 1989–95. After a 22-year hiatus, it was revived in 2017.[1]
The NCAA began sponsoring women's college volleyball championships in 1981, replacing the AIAW as the highest-level governing body for the sport. The 1981 tournament consisted of 20 teams.
In the first few years, the NCAA field was composed largely of teams from the southwest and west coast, but the sport grew in nationwide popularity in the 1980s. By 1988, the NCAA tournament had expanded to 32 teams. However, there were 29 women's volleyball conferences in 1988 and only 16 were represented in the tournament.
The idea for the National Invitational Volleyball Championship was hatched that fall by a trio of volleyball coaches from schools belonging to unrepresented conferences: Brenda Williams from UAB, Charlie Daniel from Western Kentucky, and Geri Polvino from Eastern Kentucky. Williams and Polvino were frustrated that their teams had each won conference titles but could not play postseason volleyball because the NCAA didn't invite them, so they created a second-tier postseason volleyball tournament, the Women's Invitational Volleyball Championship, to debut in 1989.
The 1989 tournament was held in four regional pools of four teams each, with a playoff for the pool winners. Wisconsin won the trophy that year, and the idea was such a success that the next year's tournament was held at the University of Tennessee, an extra team was added to each pool, and attendance increased tenfold from 500 to 5000. In 1991, the tournament was renamed the National Invitational Volleyball Championship, and by 1992 it was so popular that it was moved to the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, a 7300-seat arena. The NIVC held its tournament there for the last four years of its initial existence.
By 1993, however, the NCAA Tournament had expanded to 48 teams, and the next year it introduced play-in games, which allowed nearly every conference champion a spot in the tournament. The NIVC felt it had done its job in kindling national interest in the sport, and its tournament folded after 1995, sitting dormant for the next 22 years.
However, by 2016, many in the sport felt there could be a market for a second-tier volleyball tournament. Regular-season champions in smaller conferences are often not given any postseason if they don't win their conference tournament, despite outstanding regular seasons, such as the 2005 Albany (28–4), 2009 Southern Miss (27–5), or 2010 Ball State (24–5) teams.[2] [3] [4] Also, there are many larger conferences with large fan bases that only send a few teams to the tournament each year—for example, the Atlantic Coast Conference regularly sends only three or four teams to the NCAA Tournament, disappointing the fans of the other teams. In December 2016, the tournament was revived as a 32-team tournament, scheduled for its second debut in November 2017. The new tournament is run by Triple Crown Sports, which has run basketball's WNIT for the past two decades and also started a National Invitational Softball Championship in spring 2017.[5]
The 2020 tournament was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which emerged in March 2020.[6]
The new NIVC consists of 32 teams that did not make the NCAA Tournament. This includes automatic qualifications for the best team from each of the 32 conferences to not be invited to the NCAA Tournament, with any vacancies filled by at-large bids to the teams with the highest RPI, regardless of conference or geographic location. The field is grouped into 4-team regionals based on geographic location. The full field was announced a few hours after the actual NCAA selection show on the night of Sunday, November 26, although some automatic bids were announced earlier.[7] [8]
Reference:[9]