2003 Women's South American Volleyball Championship

The 2003 Women's South American Volleyball Championship was the 25th edition of the South American Women's Volleyball Championship, organised by South America's governing volleyball body, the Confederación Sudamericana de Voleibol (CSV). It was held in Bogota, Colombia from September 4 to 6, 2003.[1]

2003 Women's South American Volleyball Championship
Tournament details
Host nation Colombia
DatesSeptember 4–6
Teams4
Venue(s)1 (in Bogota host cities)
Champions Brazil (13th title)

Teams

Play-off

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Venezuela  0–2  Peru 2–3 2–3
Date Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total
30 Aug Venezuela  2–3  Peru 23–25 25–19 16–25 25–12 11–15 100–96
31 Aug Peru  3–2  Venezuela 12–25 25–15 18–25 25–16 15–10 95–91

Peru and Venezuela played a qualification play-off, Brazil and Argentina played the final round automatically as best two in the previous edition and Colombia qualified as host.

Teams

 Argentina
 Brazil
 Colombia
 Peru

Competition System

The competition system for the 2003 Women's South American Championship was a single Round-Robin system. Each team plays once against each of the 3 remaining teams. Points are accumulated during the whole tournament, and the final ranking is determined by the total points gained.

Standings

Pts Matches Points Sets
Rank Team W L W L Ratio W L Ratio
1  Brazil 6 3 0 226 212 1.066 9 0 MAX
2  Argentina 5 2 1 255 274 0.931 6 6 1.000
3  Peru 4 1 2 255 261 0.977 5 7 0.714
4  Colombia 3 0 3 191 272 0.702 2 9 0.222

Matches

Date Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total
4 Sep Argentina  3–2  Peru 25–27 28–26 21–25 25–20 15–13 114–112
4 Sep Brazil  3–0  Colombia 25–15 25–11 25–9     75–34
5 Sep Brazil  3–0  Peru 26–24 25–14 25–6     76–44
5 Sep Argentina  3–1  Colombia 25–15 25–23 23–25 25–14   98–87
6 Sep Peru  3–1  Colombia 25–15 24–26 25–16 25–13   99–71
6 Sep Brazil  3–0  Argentina 25–17 25–13 25–13     75–43

Final standing

gollark: Running USB devices off alkaline batteries is kind of niche and was especially niche when the standard was made.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> *But* computer PSUs also have 5V rails. 12V and 3.3V too though, I'm not sure why they didn't use those.
gollark: I mean, this spreads very well, is 2%-ish lethal, and leaves a decent amount of people with severe symptoms and needing lots of medical treatment.
gollark: The left one.
gollark: It's for *some* consumers.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.