FIVB Beach Volleyball U19 World Championships

The FIVB Beach Volleyball U19 World Championships (previously known as the FIVB Beach Volleyball Swatch Youth World Championships)[1] is a double-gender international beach volleyball tournament for athletes under the age of 19. The competition first took place in Xylokastro, Greece, in 2002.[2][3] Prior to the 2005 edition, it was an under-18 tournament.[4]

Results summary

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Men's U19 World Championship
Year Host Champions Runners-up 3rd place 4th place
2002[5]  
Xylokastro
  Ian Borges
and Pedro Solberg Salgado (BRA)
  Andreas Gortsianiouk
and Thodoris Papadimitriou (GRE)
  Ruslan Dayanov
and Yaroslav Koshkarev (RUS)
  Kamil Lyczko
and Sebastian Pecherz (POL)
2003[6]  
Pattaya
  Sebastian Fuchs
and Thomas Kaczmarek (GER)
  Ian Borges
and Pedro Solberg Salgado (BRA)
  Tomasz Sinczak
and Rafal Szternel (POL)
  Michel Mokondoko
and Juan Virgen (MEX)
2004[7]  
Termoli
  Arunas Kirsnys
and Arvydas Miseikis (LIT)
  Zbigniew Bartman
and Michał Kubiak (POL)
  Ingars Ivanovs
and Jānis Šmēdiņš (LAT)
  Reid Hall
and Adam Podstawka (CAN)
2005[a]  
Saint-Quay-Portrieux
  Tine Urnaut
and Nejc Zemljak (SLO)
  Joey Dykstra
and Mark van Zwieten (USA)
  Grzegorz Fijałek
and Michal Matyja (POL)
  Jonathan Erdmann
and Stefan Windscheif (GER)
2006  
Bermuda
  Jonathan Erdmann
and Marvin Klass (GER)
  Francesco Giontella
and Paolo Nicolai (ITA)
  Matteo Ingrosso
and Paolo Ingrosso (ITA)
  Brice Thesee
and Renaud Ventresque (FRA)
2007  
Mysłowice
  Michał Kądzioła
and Jakub Szałankiewicz (POL)
  Stefan Köhler
and Malte Stiel (GER)
  Vitalii Didukh
and Pavlo Ostapenko (UKR)
  Marcin Kantor
and Damian Wojtasik (POL)
2008  
The Hague
  Kristo Kollo
and Oliver Venno (EST)
  Jeffrey Carlson
and Antonio Ciarelli (USA)
  Marek Leznicki
and Damian Wojtasik (POL)
  Víctor Bouza
and Jesús Castizo (ESP)
2009  
Alanya
  Sergiy Popov
and Valeriy Samoday (UKR)
  Andrey Bolgov
and Ruslan Bykanov (RUS)
  Kevin Medina
and César Menéndez (ESP)
  Michel Bargmann
and Felix Quecke (GER)
2010  
Porto
  Piotr Kantor
and Bartosz Łosiak (POL)
  Maxim Anufriev
and Artem Kucherenko (RUS)
  Lorenz Schümann
and Dominik Stork (GER)
  Nick Del Bianco
and Garrett May (CAN)
2011  
Umag
  Łukasz Kaczmarek
and Maciej Kosiak (POL)
  Runar Sannarnes
and Andreas Takvam (NOR)
  Aaron Nusbaum
and Grant O'Gorman (CAN)
  Benjamin Lerch
and Dennis Lerch (SUI)
2012  
Larnaca
  Michal Bryl
and Kacper Kujawiak (POL)
  Sebastian Kaczemarek
and Łukasz Kaczmarek (POL)
  Viacheslav Kirienko
and Dmitry Uraikin (RUS)
  Martin Ermacora
and Lukas Stranger (AUT)
2013  
Porto
  Moritz Reichert
and Clemens Wickler (GER)
  Bjarne Huus
and Christian Sørum (NOR)
  Torey DeFalco
and Lucas Yoder (USA)
  Lukas Každailis
and Arnas Rumševičius (LIT)
2014  
Porto
  Arthur Lanci
and George Wanderley (BRA)
  Illia Kovaliov
and Oleh Plotnytskyi (UKR)
  Tigrito Gómez
and Peter Hernández (VEN)
  Jasper Bouter
and Tom van Steenis (NED)
2016  
Larnaka
  Renato Carvalho
and Rafael Quiero (BRA)
  Florian Breer
and Yves Haussener (SUI)
  Mihails Samoilovs
and Kristaps Smits (LAT)
  Rémi Bassereau
and Timothée Platre (FRA)
2018  
Nanjing
  Denis Shekunov
and Dmitrii Veretiuk (RUS)
  Filip John
and Lukas Pfretzschner (GER)
  Alexey Gusev
and Pavel Shustrov (RUS)
  Bautista Amieva
and Mauro Zelayeta (ARG)
2021  
Phuket
  Arthur Canet
and Téo Rotar (FRA)
  Wachirawit Muadpha
and Netitorn Muneekul (THA)
  Nicolas Capretti
and Samuel Oselame (BRA)
  Ivan Chuprinov
and Vladislav Panchenko (RUS)
2022  
Dikili
  Gustavs Auziņš
and Kristians Fokerots (LAT)
  Olivers Bulgačs
and Dāvis Teteris (LAT)
  Arthur Canet
and Téo Rotar (FRA)
  Raoul Acerbi
and Andrea Armellini (ITA)
2024  
Shangluo
  Szymon Pietraszek
and Jakub Krzemiński (POL)
  Matīss Šalkovskis
and Karlis Jaundžeikars (LAT)
  Amir Ali Ghalehnovi
and Habib Akbarzadeh (IRI)
  Inés Vargas
and Carlos Ayala (MEX)

Notes:

  1. ^ From 2005 onwards, the tournament was changed from under-18 to under-19.[4]

Women

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Women's U19 World Championship
Year Host Champions Runners-up 3rd place 4th place
2002[8]  
Xylokastro
  Sanne Keizer
& Arjanne Stevens (NED)
  Claudia Lehmann
& Friederike Romberg (GER)
  Ruth Flemig
& Ilka Semmler (GER)
  Isabel Grael
& Carolina Solberg Salgado (BRA)
2003[9]  
Pattaya
  Jana Köhler
& Laura Ludwig (GER)
  Carolina Solberg Salgado
& Bárbara Seixas (BRA)
  Frederike Fischer
& Sandra Piasecki (GER)
  Diana Estrada
& Martha Revuelta (MEX)
2004  
Termoli
  Katarzyna Urban
& Joanna Wiatr (POL)
  Carolina Solberg Salgado
& Bárbara Seixas (BRA)
  Florentina Büttner
& Julia Sude (GER)
  Marleen van Iersel
& Margo Wiltens (NED)
2005[a]  
Saint-Quay-Portrieux
  Carolina Aragão
& Bárbara Seixas (BRA)
  Katarzyna Urban
& Joanna Wiatr (POL)
  Florentina Büttner
& Julia Sude (GER)
  Veronika Opravilová
& Markéta Sluková (CZE)
2006  
Bermuda
  Becchara Palmer
& Alice Rohkamper (AUS)
  Daniëlle Remmers
& Marleen van Iersel (NED)
  Britta Büthe
& Svenja Engelhardt (GER)
  Tanja Goricanec
& Taryn Sciarini (SUI)
2007  
Mysłowice
  Daniëlle Remmers
& Michelle Stiekema (NED)
  Gilda Lombardo
& Marta Menegatti (ITA)
  Iveta Halbichová
& Barbora Jerábková (CZE)
  Monika Brzostek
& Weronika Kurek (POL)
2008  
The Hague
  Chantal Laboureur
& Levke Spinger (GER)
  Rimke Braakman
& Sophie van Gestel (NED)
  Irina Chaika
& Ekaterina Karapischenko (RUS)
  Beata Galek
& Daria Paszek (POL)
2009  
Alanya
  Christine Aulenbrock
& Victoria Bieneck (GER)
  Irina Chaika
& Ekaterina Karapischenko (RUS)
  Ksenia Sukhareva
& Maria Ushkova (RUS)
  Olga Samul
& Izabela Soja (POL)
2010  
Porto
  Jane Croson
& Summer Ross (USA)
  Ekaterina Karapischenko
& Maria Ushkova (RUS)
  Taliqua Clancy
& Eliza Hynes (AUS)
  Rebecca Cavalcante
& Juliana Simões (BRA)
2011  
Umag
  Karolina Baran
& Katarzyna Kociołek (POL)
  Lena Plesiutschnig
& Katharina Schützenhöfer (AUT)
  Lin Lingling
& Zhang Changning (CHN)
  Pauline Martin
& Lisa Menet-Haure (FRA)
2012  
Larnaca
  Ieva Dumbauskaitė
& Monika Povilaitytė (LIT)
  Karolina Baran
& Katarzyna Kociołek (POL)
  Ksenia Dabizha
& Anna Gorbunova (RUS)
  Sandra Ittlinger
& Yanina Weiland (GER)
2013  
Porto
  Eduarda Santos Lisboa
& Tainá Silva (BRA)
  Anna Gorbunova
& Nadezda Makroguzova (RUS)
  Kelly Claes
& Sara Hughes (USA)
  Sarah Schneider
& Lara Schreiber (GER)
2014  
Porto
  Eduarda Santos Lisboa
& Andressa Ramalho (BRA)
  Lisa Arnholdt
& Sarah Schneider (GER)
  Megan McNamara
& Nicole McNamara (CAN)
  Kristýna Adamčíková
& Kateřina Valková (CZE)
2016  
Larnaka
  Eduarda Santos Lisboa
& Victoria Tosta (BRA)
  Nika Daalderop
& Mexime van Driel (NED)
  Milica Mirkovic
& Kathryn Plummer (USA)
  Ana Carolina Almeida
& Vitória Rodrigues (BRA)
2018  
Nanjing
  Maria Bocharova
& Maria Voronina (RUS)
  Raïsa Schoon
& Emi van Driel (NED)
  Daniela Álvarez
& Tania Moreno (ESP)
  Devon Newberry
& Lindsey Sparks (USA)
2021  
Phuket
  Megan Kraft
& Delayne Maple (USA)
  Olga Gavrilova
& Alina Salmanova (RUS)
  Anhelina Khmil
& Tetiana Lazarenko (UKR)
  Xolani Hodel
& Katherine Reilly (USA)
2022  
Dikili
  Daria Romaniuk
& Yeva Serdiuk (UKR)
  Myriah Massey
& Ashley Pater (USA)
  Emma Glagau
& Ruby Sorra (CAN)
  Sophie Kubiak
& Bailey Showalter (USA)
2024  
Shangluo
  Myriah Massey
& Lily Davis (USA)
  Sofía Izuzquiza
& Marta Carro (ESP)
  Sally Perez
& Sarah Wood (USA)
  Varagkhana Sogalee
& Somruedee Koedkaew (THA)

Notes:

  1. ^ From 2005 onwards, the tournament was changed from under-18 to under-19.[4]

Medals table

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Poland74314
2  Brazil73111
3  Germany64616
4  United States33410
5  Russia26614
6  Netherlands2406
7  Ukraine2125
8  Lithuania2002
9  Latvia1225
10  Australia1012
  France1012
12  Estonia1001
  Slovenia1001
14  Italy0213
15  Norway0202
16  Spain0123
17  Austria0101
  Greece0101
  Switzerland0101
  Thailand0101
21  Canada0033
22  China0011
  Czech Republic0011
  Iran0011
  Venezuela0011
Totals (25 entries)363636108

References

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  1. ^ "City and dates confirmed for FIVB Beach Volleyball SWATCH Youth World Championships". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. February 2, 2012. Retrieved December 25, 2018.
  2. ^ "Beach volleyball history: 2002". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  3. ^ "Brazil and Netherlands capture first Under-18 World Champions title". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. September 1, 2002. Archived from the original on July 29, 2003. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "BEACH VOLLEYBALL COMPETITIONS". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  5. ^ "Under 18 Men World Championship 2002: Main Draw ranking". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  6. ^ "THAILAND, 2003 FIVB Men's World Championships U-18, presented by Swatch: Main Draw Ranking". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  7. ^ "ITALY, 2004 FIVB Men's World Championships U-18, presented by Swatch: Main Draw Ranking". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. Retrieved September 16, 2024.
  8. ^ "Under 18 Women World Championship 2002: Main Draw ranking". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  9. ^ "THAILAND, 2003 FIVB Women's World Championships U-18, presented by Swatch: Main Draw Ranking". Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. Retrieved March 1, 2019.