Sitting volleyball explained

Sitting Volleyball
Union:
  1. ISMGF (1956-1981) No Organ
  2. ISOD (1981-1992)
  3. ISOD (1992-1994) Separate
  4. WOVD (1994-2014)
  5. WPV (2014-present)
Mgender:No
Category:Indoor
Paralympic:1976 - 1980

Sitting volleyball is a form of volleyball for athletes with a disability organized by World ParaVolley. As opposed to standing volleyball, sitting volleyball players must sit on the floor to play.

History

Sitting volleyball was invented in the Netherlands by the Dutch Sport Committee in 1956 as a rehabilitation sport for injured soldiers. [1] [2] In 1958, the first international sitting volleyball contact was held between Germany and Dutch clubteams.[3]

It was created as a combination of volleyball and sitzball, a German sport with no net and seated players. Sitting volleyball first appeared in the Toronto 1976 Paralympic games as a demonstration sport for athletes with impaired mobility, and both standing and sitting volleyball became officially included as medal sports in the Paralympic games at Arnhem in 1980. Women’s sitting volleyball was added for the Athens 2004 Paralympic Games. [4]

After the London 2012 games, VolleySLIDE was founded by Matt Rogers to promote and develop the sport globally. [5] Eight men's and eight women's teams competed in the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games.[1]

Rules

See also: Sitting volleyball classification. In sitting volleyball, a 7adj=midNaNadj=mid, 0.8adj=midNaNadj=mid net is set at 1.15m (03.77feet) high for men and 1.05m (03.44feet) high for women. The court is NaNm (-2,147,483,648feet) meters with a 2-metre (6.6-foot) attack line. The rules are the same as the original form of volleyball with the exceptions that players must have at least one buttock in contact with the floor whenever they make contact with the ball and it is also possible to block the serve.[6] [3]

Athletes with the following disabilities are eligible to compete in sitting volleyball: athletes with amputations, spinal cord injuries, cerebral palsy, brain injuries and stroke. Classifications of these athletes by disability are placed into two categories: MD and D. MD stands for "Minimally Disabled," and D stands for “Disabled.” While Minimally Disabled athletes have lost only a fraction of their muscular strength and flexibility in a joint preventing them from successfully playing standing volleyball, Disabled athletes have lost all of their muscular strength and flexibility in that joint.

Only two MD players are allowed on the roster for the Paralympic Games and only one is allowed on the court at a time; this is to keep the competition fair between rival teams. The rest of the team must be classified as D players.[3] [7] Skills are largely identical to the sport of volleyball and the following game terminology apply:

Members

World ParaVolley

List also includes former members (national teams that took part in previous major tournaments).

List of sitting volleyball national teams[8]

Defunct national teams

Championships

Paralympics

See also: Volleyball at the Summer Paralympics.

Sitting volleyball was first demonstrated at the Summer Paralympic Games in 1976 and was introduced as a full Paralympic event in 1980. The 2000 games was the last time standing volleyball appeared on the Paralympic programme. The women's sitting volleyball event introduction followed in the 2004 Paralympic Games.[6]

World ParaVolley (formerly WOVD) World Championships

World Para Volleyball Championship

Sitting

Men's Sitting - Past winners

1983Delden Netherlands Germany Finland
1985Kristiansand Iran Yugoslavia Netherlands
1986 Iran Hungary Netherlands
1989 Netherlands Hungary Germany
1990Assen Iran Netherlands Yugoslavia
1994 Bottrop Iran Norway Netherlands
1998 Iran Finland Bosnia and Herzegovina
2002Cairo Bosnia and Herzegovina Germany Iran
2006Roermond Bosnia and Herzegovina Iran Egypt
2010 Iran Bosnia and Herzegovina Egypt
2014 Elblag Bosnia and Herzegovina Brazil Iran
2018 Iran Bosnia and Herzegovina Ukraine
2022 Iran Bosnia and Herzegovina Brazil

Ranking

Women's Sitting - Past winners

1994 Netherlands Latvia Lithuania
2000 Netherlands Finland Slovenia
2002Kamnik Netherlands Slovenia Finland
2006Roermond Netherlands China Slovenia
2010 China United States Ukraine
2014 Elblag China United States Russia
2018 Russia United States China
2022 Brazil Canada United States

Beach

ParaVolley Europe (formerly ECVD) European Championships

Euro Federation

https://paravolley.eu/

https://paravolley.eu/competitions

https://paravolley.eu/competitions/history/roll-of-honour

NATIONS LEAGUE 2024

Men's Sitting - Past winners

[9] [10] [11] [12]

Sitting VolleyballEuropean Championships

Latest Update: 13/05/2024 14:33

Ed. Year City Teams G S B

I 1981 Bonn NED FRG SWE

II 1983 Delten NED FRG FIN

III 1985 Kristiansand NED YUG SWE

IV 1987 Sarajevo NED YUG NOR

V 1991 Nottingham NED HUN NOR

VI 1993 Jarvenpaa NOR FIN HUN

VII 1995 Ljubljana HUN NOR NED

VIII 1997 Tallinn FIN NOR BIH

IX 1999 Sarajevo BIH GER FIN

X 2001 Sarospatak BIH GER NED

XI 2003 Lappeenranta BIH GER FIN

XII 2005 Leverkusen BIH GER RUS

XIII 2007 Nyiregyhaza BIH RUS GER

XIV 2009 Elblag BIH RUS GER

XV 2011 Rotterdam BIH RUS GER

XVI 2013 Elblag BIH RUS GER

XVII 2015 Warendorf BIH GER RUS

XVIII 2017 Porec RUS UKR BIH

XIX 2019 Budapest RUS BIH GER

XX 2021 Kemer BIH RUS GER

XXI 2023 Caorle BIH GER UKR

XXII 2025

1981Bonn Netherlands Germany Sweden
1983
1985
1987 Netherlands Yugoslavia
1989 Not Held
1991 Nottingham Netherlands
1993 Järvenpää Norway Finland
1995 Ljubljana Hungary
1997 Tallinn Finland Bosnia and Herzegovina
1999 Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina Germany Finland
2001 Sárospatak Bosnia and Herzegovina Germany
2003 Lappeenranta Bosnia and Herzegovina Germany Finland
2005 Leverkusen Bosnia and Herzegovina Germany Russia
2007 Nyíregyháza Bosnia and Herzegovina Russia Germany
2009 Elblag Bosnia and Herzegovina Russia Germany
2011 Rotterdam Bosnia and Herzegovina Russia Germany
2013 Elblag Bosnia and Herzegovina Russia Germany
2015 Warendorf Bosnia and Herzegovina Germany Russia
2017 Poreč Russia Ukraine Bosnia and Herzegovina
2019Budapest Russia Bosnia and Herzegovina Germany
2021 Antalya Bosnia and Herzegovina Russia Germany
Caorle Bosnia and Herzegovina Germany Ukraine

Women's Sitting - Past winners

1993 Jarvenpaa Netherlands Finland Estonia
1995 Ljubljana Netherlands Latvia Slovenia
1997 Tallinn Latvia Lithuania Netherlands
1999 Sarajevo Slovenia Finland Netherlands
2001 Sarospatak Netherlands Slovenia Finland
2003 Lappeenranta Netherlands Slovenia Finland
2005 Leverkusen Netherlands Lithuania Slovenia
2007 Nyiregyhaza Netherlands Ukraine Slovenia
2009 Elblag Netherlands Ukraine Slovenia
2011 Rotterdam Ukraine Netherlands Russia
2013 Elblag Russia Ukraine Slovenia
2015 Podcetrtek Ukraine Russia Slovenia
2017 Poreč Russia Ukraine Netherlands
2019 Budapest Russia Italy Ukraine
2021 Antalya Russia Italy Germany
2023 Caorle Italy Slovenia Ukraine

Women (1993-2023)

See also

External links

See main article: world championships.

Notes and References

  1. "Sitting Volleyball." Tokyo 1500. https://tokyo2020.org/en/games/sport/paralympic/sitting-volleyball/.
  2. Web site: ParaVolley & Deaf Volleyball. 2020-10-15. www.volleyballaustralia.org.au.
  3. “Sitting Volleyball: Paralympic Classification Interactive.” Team USA, United States OlympicCommittee, 2019, www.teamusa.org/US-Paralympics/athlete-classifications/standing-volleyball/.
  4. "Sport Week: History of Sitting Volleyball." Official Website of the Paralympic Movement, 2016. https://www.paralympic.org/news/sport-week-history-sitting-volleyball/.
  5. "VolleySlide Founder and Leader. World ParaVolley VolleySLIDE. http://www.volleyslide.net/founder-leader/4583509203/.
  6. Book: Ng, Kwok. When Sitting is Not Resting: Sitting Volleyball. 2012. Authorhouse. Bloomington, IL. 978-1-4772-1789-4. 152.
  7. “Sitting Volleyball.” UCO, sites.uco.edu/wellness/sr/trainingsite/tssitvolleyball.asp.
  8. Web site: Sitting Volleyball Rankings > World ParaVolley.
  9. Web site: Major Competitions. www.sittingvolleyball.info. Kwok Ng. 26 September 2016. 26 September 2016.
  10. https://api.website.paravolley.eu/storage/files/9c087bc9-1a35-4393-bf7d-f80e8357f61e.pdf
  11. Web site: Roll of Honour .
  12. Web site: Previous Years .