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2018 FIVB Women's Volleyball Challenger Cup

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2018 Women's Challenger Cup
Copa Challenger de Femenino
Perú 2018
Lima, host city
Tournament details
Host nation Peru
CityLima
Dates20–24 June
Teams6
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Champions Bulgaria (1st title)
Runners-up Colombia
Third place Puerto Rico
Fourth place Peru
Tournament statistics
Best scorerColombia Dayana Segovia (78 points)
Best spikerColombia Dayana Segovia (39.41 %)
Best blockerBulgaria Hristina Ruseva (1.54 Avg)
Best serverPeru Diana De la Peña (0.43 Avg)
Best setterColombia María Alejandra Marín (31.14 Avg)
Best diggerPeru Esmeralda Sanchez (4.43 Avg)
Best receiverBulgaria Zhana Todorova (32.76 %)
Official website
challengercup.volleyball.world
First

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

Bulgaria won the title, defeating Colombia 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] Puerto Rico defeated Peru 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
 Australiaa AVC Asian qualifier 3rd place[6] 20 May 2018 0 None None
 Puerto Rico NORCECA North American qualifier champions[7] 20 May 2018 0 None None
 Colombiab CSV South American qualifier runner-up 27 May 2018 0 None None
 Peru CSV Host country 15 June 2018 0 None None
 Bulgaria CEV 2018 Golden League champions[8] 17 June 2018 0 None None
 Hungary CEV 2018 Golden League runner-up[8] 17 June 2018 0 None None
Note
^a Australia replaced Kazakhstan, the Asian qualifier winners, who withdrew from the tournament.[9]
^b Originally, a CSV representative was to face a team from Africa in a playoff for a spot in the Challenger Cup. According to the Chilean Volleyball Federation (FEVOCHI), however, FIVB fined the African Volleyball Confederation for not hosting any kind of qualifier event.[10]

Pools composition

Teams were seeded following the Serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of August 2017.[11] 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 26th.

Pool A Pool B
 Peru (Host)  Puerto Rico (13)
 Colombia (28)  Bulgaria (17)
 Hungary (30)  Australia (42)

Preliminary round

Qualified for Final round

Pool A

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Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
20 Jun 19:00 Peru  0–3  Colombia 24–26 12–25 12–25     48–76  
21 Jun 19:00 Colombia  3–0  Hungary 25–13 25–19 25–7     75–39  
22 Jun 19:00 Hungary  0–3  Peru 14–25 11–25 26–28     51–78  

Pool B

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Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
20 Jun 17:00 Bulgaria  3–0  Australia 25–11 25–16 25–15     75–42 P2 Report
21 Jun 17:00 Puerto Rico  3–0  Australia 25–10 25–19 25–15     75–44  
22 Jun 17:00 Bulgaria  3–0  Puerto Rico 25–18 25–18 25–14     75–50  

Final round

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
23 June
 
 
 Colombia3
 
24 June
 
 Puerto Rico1
 
 Colombia 1
 
23 June
 
 Bulgaria3
 
 Bulgaria3
 
 
 Peru0
 
3rd place match
 
 
24 June
 
 
 Puerto Rico3
 
 
 Peru2

Semifinals

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
23 June 16:00 Colombia  3–1  Puerto Rico 23–25 27–25 25–10 25–18   100–78  
23 June 18:00 Bulgaria  3–0  Peru 25–21 25–22 25–18     75–61  

3rd place match

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
24 June 17:00 Puerto Rico  3–2  Peru 22–25 25–15 21–25 25–17 16–14 109–96  

Final

Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
24 June 19:00 Colombia  1–3  Bulgaria 25–22 19–25 20–25 23–25   87–97  

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. ^ "ALL SET FOR FINAL SIX AS WOMEN'S VNL POOL PLAY CONCLUDES". FIVB. 15 June 2018. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  5. ^ a b "Bulgaria amongst volleyball's cream for 2019 Women's VNL". FIVB. 25 June 2018. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  6. ^ "AVC Continental Qualifications for FIVB Volleyball Challenger Cup – Women's Results". AVC. Archived from the original on 23 May 2018. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  7. ^ "2018 Norceca Women Volleyball Nation League Challenge Cup Final Continental Qualification Tournament". NORCECA. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  8. ^ a b "Hungary and Bulgaria to lock horns in Golden #EuroLeagueW 'grand finale'". CEV. 14 June 2018. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  9. ^ "VOLLEYROOS WOMEN GET LATE SECOND CHANCE". Volleyball Australia. 14 June 2018. Archived from the original on 11 July 2021. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  10. ^ "CHILE CLASIFICA DIRECTO A LA CHALLENGER CUP" (in Spanish). Federación de Voleibol de Chile. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  11. ^ "FIVB Senior World Ranking - Women (as of August 2017)". FIVB. Retrieved 16 June 2018.