2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup

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2018 Men's Challenger Cup
Tournament details
Host nation Portugal
CityMatosinhos
Dates20–24 June
Teams6
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Champions Portugal (1st title)
Official website
Volleyball Challenger Cup
First

The 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup was the inaugural edition of the FIVB Volleyball Men's Challenger Cup, a new annual men's international volleyball tournament contested by 6 national teams that acted as a qualifier for the FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League.[1][2][3] The tournament was held in Matosinhos, Portugal between 20 and 24 June.[4]

Portugal won the title, defeating Czech Republic in the final, and earned the right to participate in the 2019 Nations League replacing the last placed challenger team after the 2018 edition.[5] Estonia defeated Cuba in the third place match.[5]

Qualification

Six teams will compete in the tournament.[1]

Country Confederation Qualified as Qualified on Previous appearances Previous best performance
Total First Last
 Kazakhstan1 AVC Asian Qualifier winners 20 May 2018 0 None None
 Chile1 CSV South American Qualifier winners 20 May 2018 0 None None
 Portugal CEV Host country 6 June 2018 0 None None
 Cuba NORCECA North American Qualifier winners 9 June 2018 0 None None
 Estonia CEV 2018 European Golden League champions 13 June 2018 0 None None
 Czech Republic CEV 2018 European Golden League runners-up 13 June 2018 0 None None
1.^ Originally, the CAVB would have a direct spot in the Challenger Cup, while the representatives from AVC and CSV would play a playoff for a spot. However, FIVB fined the CAVB for not hosting any kind of qualifier event and the winners of the AVC and CSV qualifier booked a direct qualification.[6]

Pools composition

Teams were seeded following the Serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of July 2017.[7] FIVB reserved the right to seed the hosts as head of Pool A regardless of the World Ranking. Rankings are shown in brackets except hosts who ranked 30th.

Pool A Pool B
 Portugal (Host)  Cuba (16)
 Estonia (32)  Czech Republic (27)
 Kazakhstan (35)  Chile (41)

Venue

Pool standing procedure

  1. Total number of victories (matches won, matched 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.

Preliminary round

Qualified for the Semifinals

Pool A

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Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
20 Jun 21:00 Portugal  3–0  Estonia 25–19 25–16 25–20     75–55 P2
21 Jun 18:00 Estonia  3–1  Kazakhstan 25–22 19–25 25–19 25–20   94–86 P2
22 Jun 21:00 Kazakhstan  0–3  Portugal 23–25 19–25 16–25     58–75 P2

Pool B

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Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
20 Jun 18:00 Cuba  0–3  Czech Republic 19–25 22–25 21–25     62–75 P2
21 Jun 21:00 Czech Republic  3–0  Chile 25–15 25–17 25–18     75–50 P2
22 Jun 18:00 Chile  1–3  Cuba 36–38 22–25 31–29 19–25   108–117 P2

Final round

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
23 June
 
 
 Czech Republic3
 
24 June
 
 Estonia1
 
 Czech Republic1
 
23 June
 
 Portugal3
 
 Portugal3
 
 
 Cuba0
 
3rd place match
 
 
24 June
 
 
 Estonia3
 
 
 Cuba0

Semifinals

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
23 Jun 15:00 Czech Republic  3–1  Estonia 29–31 27–25 25–18 25–21   106–95 P2
23 Jun 18:00 Portugal  3–0  Cuba 25–22 25–21 26–24     76–67 P2

3rd place match

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
24 Jun 15:00 Estonia  3–0  Cuba 30–28 25–21 25–16     80–65  

Final

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
24 Jun 18:00 Czech Republic  1–3  Portugal 25–18 22–25 19–25 16–25   82–93  

Final standing

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "FIVB Executive Committee embraces digital transformation". FIVB. 7 December 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  2. ^ "FIVB: Nasce la Volleyball Challenger Cup" (in Italian). Volleyball.it. 9 December 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2018.
  3. ^ "FIVB Announces Challenger Cup, Will Align With Nations League". Volleyball.it. 20 December 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2018.
  4. ^ "Portugal vence grupo C da Golden European League" (in Portuguese). O Jogo. 6 June 2018. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  5. ^ a b "Portugal join world's elite for 2019 Men's VNL". FIVB. 24 June 2018. Retrieved 24 June 2018.
  6. ^ "Chile clasifica directo a la Challenger Cup" (in Spanish). FEVOCHI. 12 June 2018. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  7. ^ "FIVB Senior World Ranking - Men (as of July 2017)". FIVB. Retrieved 16 June 2018.

External links