2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup

The 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup was the 13th staging of the FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup, contested by the senior women's national teams of the members of the Fédération Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), the sport's global governing body. The tournament was held in Japan from 14 to 29 September 2019.[1] Japan hosted the event for the twelfth consecutive time. This was the first time that the FIVB did not distribute Olympics places since 1991 due to Japan hosting the Olympics in 2020, but points for the FIVB World Rankings were given.

2019 Women's World Cup
ワールドカップバレーボール
日本 2019
Official logo
Tournament details
Host nation Japan
CityYokohama, Hamamatsu, Sapporo, Toyama, Osaka
Dates14–29 September
Teams12 (from 5 confederations)
Venue(s)6 (in 5 host cities)
Champions China (5th title)
Runners-up United States
Third place Russia
Fourth place Brazil
Tournament awards
MVP Zhu Ting
Best Setter Ding Xia
Best OH Zhu Ting
Kelsey Robinson
Best MB Irina Koroleva
Yan Ni
Best OPP Andrea Drews
Best Libero Wang Mengjie
Tournament statistics
Matches played66
Attendance219,802 (3,330 per match)
Best scorer Nataliya Goncharova
Ana Bjelica (209 points)
Best spiker Zhu Ting (54.64%)
Best blocker Irina Koroleva (1.00 Avg)
Best server Yamila Nizetich (0.53 Avg)
Best setter Miya Sato (6.83 Avg)
Best digger Kim Hae-ran (3.95 Avg)
Best receiver Kelsey Robinson (33.13%)
Official website
FIVB Volleyball World Cup 2019

China won their historic fifth title, following titles from 1981, 1985, 2003, and 2015. China surpassed Cuba’s earlier record of four titles in the history of the competition. Defending their title as the reigning champions in 2015, China reigned to sweep all eleven matches in Yokohama, Sapporo and Osaka. USA and Russia complete the 2019 podium as silver medallists and bronze medallists respectively.[2]

Zhu Ting, outside hitter and captain of the Chinese women's volleyball national team, was selected as the World Cup’s MVP, retaining her title from 2015.[3] Zhu was joined in the Dream Team by three members of the gold-medal winning Chinese side – Yan Ni as Best Middle Blocker, Wang Mengjie as Best Libero, and Ding Xia as Best Setter. Two members of the USA squad that finished second to the Chinese Team also made the Dream Team, as Kelsey Robinson and Andrea Drews won the Best Outside Spiker and Best Opposite awards, respectively. Russia’s Irina Koroleva also won as Best Blocker.

Qualification

Twelve teams qualified for the competition as the top two teams of FIVB World Rankings of each continental federation on 1 January 2019. (except Japan who qualified as host, and Serbia who qualified as 2018 World Champion)

Qualified to 2019 FIVB World Cup
Hosts and 2018 World Champion
Rank Team WC 2015 OG 2016 WGP 2017 WCH 2018 Total Note
1 Serbia9090421003222018 World champion
2 China1001004080320AVC first team
3 United States80803858256NORCECA first team
4 Brazil50505050200CSV first team
5 Russia70502850198CEV first team
6 Japan50503258190Host
7 Netherlands0703870178CEV second team
8 Italy0304590165
9 South Korea40501830138AVC second team
10 Dominican Republic3033045108NORCECA second team
11 Argentina253083093CSV second team
12 Turkey03244572
13 Puerto Rico020143670
14 Thailand03263665
15 Germany02174059
16 Bulgaria00154055
17 Cameroon02022547CAVB first team
18 Canada02123044
19 Belgium02221842
20 Kenya5023037CAVB second team

Qualified teams

Country Confederation Qualified as Qualified on Previous appearances
Total First Last
 Japan AVC Host Country 31 January 2013 12 1973 2015
 Serbia CEV World Champions 20 October 2018 3 2007 2015
 China AVC World Ranking for AVC 1 January 2019 10 1977 2015
 South Korea 12 1973 2015
 Cameroon CAVB World Ranking for CAVB 0
 Kenya 5 1991 2015
 Russia1 CEV World Ranking for CEV 8 1973 2015
 Netherlands 1 1995 1995
 Brazil CSV World Ranking for CSV 9 1973 2011
 Argentina 5 1973 2015
 United States NORCECA World Ranking for NORCECA 10 1973 2015
 Dominican Republic 4 2003 2015
Notes
1 Competed as Soviet Union from 1973 to 1991; 3rd appearance as Russia.

Squads

Coaches

  • Oldest coach: José Roberto Guimarães – 65 years and 44 days in the first game against Serbia.
  • Youngest coach: Jamie Morrison – 38 years and 306 days in the first game against Argentina.

Players

  • Appearance record: Fabiana Claudino, Prisilla Altagracia Rivera Brens, Janet Wanja, Mercy Moim and Kim Yeon-koung participated in the World Cup four times.
  • Oldest player: At 38 years and 38 days, Annerys Vargas is the oldest player ever to be nominated in the tournament.
  • Youngest player: Bojana Gočanin is the youngest player at the age of 16 years and 354 days.
  • Tallest player: At 2.01 m, Yuan Xinyue and Brayelin Martínez are the tallest players ever to be nominated in the tournament.
  • Shortest player: At 1.60 m, Léia Silva is the shortest player ever to be nominated in the tournament.

Venues

Site First round Second round Third round
A YokohamaSapporoOsaka
Yokohama ArenaHokkaido Prefectural Sports CenterOsaka Municipal Central Gymnasium
Capacity: 12,000Capacity: 7,000Capacity: 8,000
B HamamatsuToyamaOsaka
Hamamatsu ArenaToyama City GymnasiumEdion Arena Osaka
Capacity: 5,000Capacity: 5,000Capacity: 5,000

Format

Pool standing procedure

  1. Total number of victories (matches won, matches lost)
  2. In the event of a tie, the following first tiebreaker will apply: The teams will be ranked by the most point gained per match as follows:
    • Match won 3–0 or 3–1: 3 points for the winner, 0 points for the loser
    • Match won 3–2: 2 points for the winner, 1 point for the loser
    • Match forfeited: 3 points for the winner, 0 points (0–25, 0–25, 0–25) for the loser
  3. If teams are still tied after examining the number of victories and points gained, then the FIVB will examine the results in order to break the tie in the following order:
    • Set quotient: if two or more teams are tied on the number of points gained, they will be ranked by the quotient resulting from the division of the number of all set won by the number of all sets lost.
    • Points quotient: if the tie persists based on the set quotient, the teams will be ranked by the quotient resulting from the division of all points scored by the total of points lost during all sets.
    • If the tie persists based on the point quotient, the tie will be broken based on the team that won the match of the Round Robin Phase between the tied teams. When the tie in point quotient is between three or more teams, these teams ranked taking into consideration only the matches involving the teams in question.

Results

Rank Team Matches Pts Sets Points
W L W L Ratio W L Ratio
1  China 11 0 32 33 3 11.000 881 627 1.405
2  United States 10 1 28 30 10 3.000 929 773 1.202
3  Russia 8 3 23 27 14 1.929 948 818 1.159
4  Brazil 7 4 21 24 16 1.500 922 832 1.108
5  Japan 6 5 19 23 19 1.211 918 899 1.021
6  South Korea 6 5 18 21 19 1.105 898 888 1.011
7  Dominican Republic 6 5 17 22 21 1.048 933 949 0.983
8  Netherlands 5 6 17 21 19 1.105 890 865 1.029
9  Serbia 4 7 13 20 24 0.833 927 954 0.972
10  Argentina 2 9 5 9 29 0.310 736 890 0.827
11  Kenya 1 10 3 3 31 0.097 590 835 0.707
12  Cameroon 0 11 2 5 33 0.152 670 912 0.735

First Round

Site A – Yokohama

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
14 Sep12:30Cameroon  0–3  Russia 14–2515–2510–25  39–75Report
14 Sep15:00China  3–0  South Korea 25–2125–1525–14  75–50Report
14 Sep19:20Dominican Republic  1–3  Japan 21–2511–2526–2414–25 72–99Report
15 Sep12:30Cameroon  0–3  China 18–2514–2519–25  51–75Report
15 Sep15:00South Korea  1–3  Dominican Republic 17–2526–2423–2523–25 89–99Report
15 Sep19:20Russia  3–2  Japan 25–1123–2525–2725–1915–7113–89Report
16 Sep12:30Dominican Republic  3–2  Cameroon 25–1725–1523–2528–3015–10116–97Report
16 Sep15:40China  3–0  Russia 25–2225–1625–18  75–56Report
16 Sep19:20Japan  1–3  South Korea 25–2319–2522–2525–27 91–100Report
18 Sep12:30Russia  3–0  South Korea 25–1829–2725–12  79–57Report
18 Sep15:00China  3–0  Dominican Republic 25–1925–2125–19  75–59Report
18 Sep19:20Cameroon  0–3  Japan 17–2517–2520–25  54–75Report
19 Sep12:30Dominican Republic  2–3  Russia 16–2523–2525–2325–235–1594–111Report
19 Sep15:00South Korea  3–0  Cameroon 25–2125–1825–18  75–57Report
19 Sep19:20Japan  0–3  China 17–2510–2517–25  44–75Report

Site B – Hamamatsu

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
14 Sep11:00United States  3–0  Kenya 25–1425–2025–14  75–48Report
14 Sep14:00Argentina  0–3  Netherlands 16–2517–2519–25  52–75Report
14 Sep17:00Serbia  2–3  Brazil 20–2525–2318–2525–2212–15100–110Report
15 Sep11:00Kenya  0–3  Netherlands 12–2519–2517–25  48–75Report
15 Sep14:00United States  3–1  Serbia 23–2525–1725–1625–15 98–73Report
15 Sep17:00Brazil  3–0  Argentina 25–1725–1925–16  75–52Report
16 Sep11:00Serbia  3–0  Kenya 25–1325–1125–17  75–41Report
16 Sep14:00Argentina  1–3  United States 21–2518–2525–1811–25 75–93Report
16 Sep17:00Netherlands  3–0  Brazil 25–2325–2125–22  75–66Report
18 Sep11:00Serbia  3–1  Argentina 25–1523–2525–2325–23 98–86Report
18 Sep14:00United States  3–0  Netherlands 25–2325–1825–19  75–60Report
18 Sep18:00Kenya  0–3  Brazil 20–2517–2514–25  51–75Report
19 Sep11:00Netherlands  2–3  Serbia 25–1825–2319–2524–269–15102–107Report
19 Sep14:00Argentina  3–0  Kenya 25–1425–1925–15  75–48Report
19 Sep18:00Brazil  0–3  United States 22–2518–2519–25  59–75Report

Second Round

Site A – Sapporo

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
22 Sep12:30Dominican Republic  3–0  Kenya 25–1725–1925–19  75–55Report
22 Sep15:00China  3–2  Brazil 25–2323–2522–2525–1915–9110–101Report
22 Sep19:20Japan  2–3  United States 24–2625–2221–2525–238–15103–111Report
23 Sep12:30Dominican Republic  1–3  Brazil 16–2525–2319–2522–25 82–98Report
23 Sep15:00China  3–0  United States 25–1625–1725–22  75–55Report
23 Sep19:20Japan  3–0  Kenya 25–1825–2225–20  75–60Report
24 Sep12:30Dominican Republic  0–3  United States 22–2523–259–25  54–75Report
24 Sep15:00China  3–0  Kenya 25–1225–1225–14  75–38Report
24 Sep19:20Japan  0–3  Brazil 14–2521–2523–25  58–75Report

Site B – Toyama

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
22 Sep11:00South Korea  3–1  Argentina 25–1921–2525–1925–9 96–72Report
22 Sep14:00Cameroon  0–3  Netherlands 15–2514–2518–25  47–75Report
22 Sep17:00Russia  3–1  Serbia 25–1620–2525–2325–16 95–80Report
23 Sep11:00South Korea  1–3  Netherlands 19–2525–2122–2523–25 89–96Report
23 Sep14:00Cameroon  0–3  Serbia 22–2514–2517–25  53–75Report
23 Sep17:00Russia  3–0  Argentina 25–2125–1625–21  75–58Report
24 Sep11:00South Korea  3–1  Serbia 25–2125–1815–2525–23 90–87Report
24 Sep14:00Cameroon  2–3  Argentina 25–2125–2020–2520–2512–15102–106Report
24 Sep18:00Russia  3–0  Netherlands 26–2425–1825–20  76–62Report

Third Round

Site A – Osaka

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
27 Sep12:30Dominican Republic  3–0  Argentina 25–1625–2327–25  77–64Report
27 Sep15:00China  3–1  Netherlands 25–1925–1621–2525–19 96–79Report
27 Sep19:20Japan  3–2  Serbia 21–2521–2525–2025–2015–6107–96Report
28 Sep12:30Dominican Republic  3–2  Netherlands 25–2325–2225–2718–2515–4108–101Report
28 Sep15:00China  3–0  Serbia 25–1425–2125–16  75–51Report
28 Sep19:20Japan  3–0  Argentina 26–2425–1525–14  76–53Report
29 Sep12:30Dominican Republic  3–1  Serbia 25–2225–2122–2525–17 97–85Report
29 Sep15:00China  3–0  Argentina 25–1725–1425–12  75–43Report
29 Sep19:20Japan  3–1  Netherlands 25–1827–2524–2625–21 101–90Report

Site B – Osaka

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
27 Sep11:00South Korea  3–0  Kenya 25–1525–1625–21  75–52Report
27 Sep14:00Cameroon  0–3  Brazil 11–2517–2518–25  46–75Report
27 Sep18:00Russia  2–3  United States 26–2422–2522–2525–178–15103–106Report
28 Sep11:00South Korea  3–1  Brazil 25–2318–2525–2025–21 93–89Report
28 Sep14:00Cameroon  0–3  United States 19–2515–255–25  39–75Report
28 Sep17:00Russia  3–0  Kenya 25–1625–2125–22  75–59Report
29 Sep11:00South Korea  1–3  United States 21–2516–2525–1622–25 84–91Report
29 Sep14:00Russia  1–3  Brazil 26–2820–2525–2119–25 90–99Report
29 Sep17:00Cameroon  1–3  Kenya 15–2524–2625–1421–25 85–90Report

Final standing

Awards

Statistics leaders

The statistics of each group follows the vis reports P2 and P3. The statistics include 6 volleyball skills; serve, reception, set, spike, block, and dig. The table below shows the top 5 ranked players in each skill plus top scorers as of 29 September 2019.[5]

Best Scorers

Best scorers determined by scored points from attack, block and serve.

Best Scorers
Player Attacks Blocks Serves Total
1 Nataliya Goncharova 184 20 5 209
Ana Bjelica 187 13 9 209
3 Brayelin Martínez 181 13 3 197
4 Zhu Ting 153 16 9 178
5 Lonneke Slöetjes 156 13 2 171

Best Attackers

Best attackers determined by successful attacks in percentage.

Best Attackers
Player Spikes Faults Shots Total %
1 Zhu Ting 153 22 105 280 54.64
2 Zhang Changning 97 28 76 201 48.26
3 Andrea Drews 105 29 91 225 46.67
4 Ksenia Parubets 113 38 98 249 45.38
5 Brayelin Martínez 181 41 177 399 45.36

Best Blockers

Best blockers determined by the average of stuff blocks per set.

Best Blockers
Player Blocks Faults Rebounds Total Avg
1 Irina Koroleva 41 61 70 172 1.00
2 Yan Ni 34 26 59 119 0.94
3 Ekaterina Efimova 33 29 60 122 0.80
Chiaka Ogbogu 32 40 72 144 0.80
5 Maja Aleksić 30 38 82 150 0.68

Best Servers

Best servers determined by the average of aces per set.

Best Servers
Player Aces Faults Hits Total Avg
1 Yamila Nizetich 20 13 79 112 0.53
2 Bethania de la Cruz 18 14 118 150 0.42
3 Juliët Lohuis 12 16 70 98 0.30
4 Zhang Changning 10 10 74 94 0.28
Ding Xia 10 6 105 121 0.28

Best Setters

Best setters determined by the average of running sets per set.

Best Setters
Player Running Faults Still Total Avg
1 Miya Sato 287 4 897 1188 6.83
2 Niverka Marte 250 7 869 1126 5.81
3 Victoria Mayer 210 5 762 977 5.53
4 Macris Carneiro 219 7 579 805 5.48
5 Ding Xia 192 5 497 694 5.33

Best Diggers

Best diggers determined by the average of successful digs per set.

Best Diggers
Player Digs Faults Receptions Total Avg
1 Kim Hae-ran 158 26 15 199 3.95
2 Larysmer Martínez Caro 169 41 35 245 3.93
3 Myrthe Schoot 134 38 28 200 3.35
4 Teodora Pušić 139 38 36 213 3.16
5 Mako Kobata 129 33 27 189 3.07

Best Receivers

Best receivers determined by efficient receptions in percentage.

Best Receivers
Player Excellents Faults Serve Total %
1 Kelsey Robinson 60 5 101 166 33.13
2 Mako Kobata 59 7 105 171 30.41
3 Gabriela Guimarães 78 7 156 241 29.46
4 Gong Xiangyu 41 4 90 135 27.41
5 Yuki Ishii 63 7 139 209 26.79
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See also

References

  1. "FIVB World Cup to return to Japan in 2019 ahead of Tokyo 2020 Olympics". Fivb.org. 20 October 2018. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  2. "China Crowned World Cup Champions Anew". Fivb.org. 29 September 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  3. "President XI Congratulates China on Historic Win". Fivb.org. 30 September 2019. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
  4. "Olympic and World champions to meet in World Cup". FIVB. 22 June 2015. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  5. "Statistics". FIVB.org. 19 September 2019.
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