FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships

The FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships is the double-gender world championship for the sport of beach volleyball organized by the Fédération Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB) the sport's global governing body. The first official edition of the event was held in Los Angeles, United States in 1997 and tournaments had been awarded every two years since then. Before 1997, ten unofficial championships not organized by the FIVB were all held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil between 1987 and 1996. The most recent World Championships took place in Hamburg, Germany in 2019

Winning the World Championships is considered to be one of the highest honours in international beach volleyball, surpassing the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour and being surpassed only by the Beach Volleyball tournament at the Summer Olympic Games.

Format

The tournament has a 48-team main draw per gender and consists of two stages: the group stage followed by the knockout stage. The prize pool for each gender is US$500,000.[1]

Editions

The 1997 Beach Volleyball World Championships, were held from 10 to 13 September 1997, in Los Angeles, California (United States). It was the first official edition of this event, after 10 unofficial championships between 1987 and 1996.

Edition Year Host City Host Country Events
11997Los Angeles United States2
21999Marseille France2
32001Klagenfurt Austria2
42003Rio de Janeiro Brazil2
52005Berlin Germany2
62007Gstaad  Switzerland2
72009Stavanger Norway2
82011Rome Italy2
92013Stare Jabłonki Poland2
102015Various Netherlands2
112017Vienna Austria2
122019Hamburg Germany2
132022Rome Italy2

Results summary

Men's tournament

Year Host City Gold medal match Bronze medal match Teams
Gold Medalists Score Silver Medalists Bronze Medalists Score 4th place
1997
Details

Los Angeles

Rogério Ferreira
and Guilherme Marques
2–1
Canyon Ceman
and Mike Whitmarsh

Dain Blanton
and Kent Steffes

Paulão Moreira
and Paulo Emilio Silva
did not played, both pairs who lost at semi-finals were awarded a bronze medals 48
1999
Details

Marseille

José Loiola
and Emanuel Rego
1–0
Martin Laciga
and Paul Laciga

Rogério Ferreira
and Guilherme Marques
1–0
Javier Bosma
and Fabio Díez
48
2001
Details

Klagenfurt

Mariano Baracetti
and Martín Conde
2–1
José Loiola
and Ricardo Santos

Vegard Høidalen
and Jørre Kjemperud
2–0
Rob Heidger
and Chip McCaw
48
2003
Details

Rio de Janeiro

Emanuel Rego
and Ricardo Santos
2–0
Dax Holdren
and Stein Metzger

Márcio Araújo
and Benjamin Insfran
2–0 awarded
(walkover)

João Brenha
and Miguel Maia
48
2005
Details

Berlin

Márcio Araújo
and Fábio Luiz Magalhães
2–0
Sascha Heyer
and Paul Laciga

Julius Brink
and Kjell Schneider
2–1
Marvin Polte
and Thorsten Schön
48
2007
Details

Gstaad

Phil Dalhausser
and Todd Rogers
2–0
Dmitri Barsuk
and Igor Kolodinsky

Andrew Schacht
and Joshua Slack
2–0
Emanuel Rego
and Ricardo Santos
48
2009
Details

Stavanger

Julius Brink
and Jonas Reckermann
2–0
Alison Cerutti
and Harley Marques Silva

Phil Dalhausser
and Todd Rogers
2–0
David Klemperer
and Eric Koreng
48
2011
Details

Rome

Alison Cerutti
and Emanuel Rego
2–0
Márcio Araújo
and Ricardo Santos

Julius Brink
and Jonas Reckermann
2–1
Mārtiņš Pļaviņš
and Jānis Šmēdiņš
48
2013
Details

Stare Jabłonki

Alexander Brouwer
and Robert Meeuwsen
2–0
Álvaro Morais Filho
and Ricardo Santos

Jonathan Erdmann
and Kay Matysik
2–0
Alison Cerutti
and Emanuel Rego
48
2015
Details

Netherlands

Alison Cerutti
and Bruno Oscar Schmidt
2–1
Reinder Nummerdor
and Christiaan Varenhorst

Evandro Oliveira
and Pedro Solberg Salgado
2–0
Theo Brunner
and Nick Lucena
48
2017
Details

Vienna

Evandro Oliveira
and André Stein
2–0
Clemens Doppler
and Alexander Horst

Viacheslav Krasilnikov
and Nikita Liamin
2–0
Maarten van Garderen
and Christiaan Varenhorst
48
2019
Details

Hamburg

Oleg Stoyanovskiy
and Viacheslav Krasilnikov
2–1
Julius Thole
and Clemens Wickler

Anders Mol
and Christian Sørum
2–1
Tri Bourne
and Trevor Crabb
48
2022
Details

Rome
48

Women's tournament

Year Host City Gold medal match Bronze medal match Teams
Gold Medalists Score Silver Medalists Bronze Medalists Score 4th place
1997
Details

Los Angeles

Sandra Pires
and Jackie Silva
2–1
Lisa Arce
and Holly McPeak

Shelda Bede
and Adriana Behar

Karolyn Kirby
and Nancy Reno
did not played, both pairs who lost at semi-finals were awarded a bronze medals 48
1999
Details

Marseille

Shelda Bede
and Adriana Behar
1–0
Annett Davis
and Jenny Johnson Jordan

Liz Masakayan
and Elaine Youngs
1–0 awarded
(walkover)

Sandra Pires
and Adriana Samuel
48
2001
Details

Klagenfurt

Shelda Bede
and Adriana Behar
2–0
Tatiana Minello
and Sandra Pires

Eva Celbová
and Soňa Nováková
2–0
Barbra Fontana
and Elaine Youngs
48
2003
Details

Rio de Janeiro

Misty May
and Kerri Walsh
2–0
Shelda Bede
and Adriana Behar

Natalie Cook
and Nicole Sanderson
2–0
Annett Davis
and Jenny Johnson Jordan
48
2005
Details

Berlin

Misty May-Treanor
and Kerri Walsh
2–0
Larissa França
and Juliana Silva

Tian Jia
and Wang Fei
2–0
Dalixia Fernández
and Tamara Larrea
48
2007
Details

Gstaad

Misty May-Treanor
and Kerri Walsh
2–0
Tian Jia
and Wang Fei

Larissa França
and Juliana Silva
2–1
Xue Chen
and Zhang Xi
48
2009
Details

Stavanger

Jennifer Kessy
and April Ross
2–0
Larissa França
and Juliana Silva

Maria Elisa Antonelli
and Talita Antunes
2–0
Shelda Bede
and Ana Paula Connelly
48
2011
Details

Rome

Larissa França
and Juliana Silva
2–1
Misty May-Treanor
and Kerri Walsh

Xue Chen
and Zhang Xi
2–0
Lenka Háječková
and Hana Klapalová
48
2013
Details

Stare Jabłonki

Xue Chen
and Zhang Xi
2–1
Karla Borger
and Britta Büthe

Liliane Maestrini
and Bárbara Seixas
2–0
Whitney Pavlik
and April Ross
48
2015
Details

Netherlands

Ágatha Bednarczuk
and Bárbara Seixas
2–1
Fernanda Alves
and Taiana Lima

Maria Elisa Antonelli
and Juliana Silva
2–1
Katrin Holtwick
and Ilka Semmler
48
2017
Details

Vienna

Laura Ludwig
and Kira Walkenhorst
2–1
April Ross
and Lauren Fendrick

Larissa França
and Talita Antunes
2–1
Sarah Pavan
and Melissa Humana-Paredes
48
2019
Details

Hamburg

Sarah Pavan
and Melissa Humana-Paredes
2–0
Alix Klineman
and April Ross

Taliqua Clancy
and Mariafe Artacho del Solar
2–0
Nina Betschart
and Tanja Hüberli
48
2022
Details

Rome
48

Medal table

Total

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Brazil1291031
2 United States57416
3 Germany2237
4 China1124
5 Russia1113
6 Netherlands1102
7 Argentina1001
 Canada1001
9  Switzerland0202
10 Austria0101
11 Australia0033
12 Norway0022
13 Czech Republic0011
Totals (13 nations)24242674

Medal table, men

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Brazil74415
2 United States1225
3 Germany1135
4 Russia1113
5 Netherlands1102
6 Argentina1001
7  Switzerland0202
8 Austria0101
9 Norway0022
10 Australia0011
Totals (10 nations)12121337

Medal table, women

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Brazil55616
2 United States45211
3 China1124
4 Germany1102
5 Canada1001
6 Australia0022
7 Czech Republic0011
Totals (7 nations)12121337
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See also

References

Notes

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