2019 in volleyball
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following were volleyball-related events during 2019 throughout the world.
World and continental beach volleyball events
- June 18–23: 2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball U21 World Championships in
Udon Thani[1]
- June 28 – July 7: 2019 Beach Volleyball World Championships in
Hamburg[2]
- Winners:
Russia (Oleg Stoyanovskiy & Viacheslav Krasilnikov) (m) /
Canada (Sarah Pavan & Melissa Humana-Paredes) (f)
- Winners:
- September 4–8: 2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour Finals in
Rome[3]
- Winners:
Russia (Oleg Stoyanovskiy & Viacheslav Krasilnikov) (m) /
Germany (Laura Ludwig & Margareta Kozuch) (f)
- Winners:
- September 18–22: 2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball Olympic Qualification Tournament in
Haiyang[4]
2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour
- January 2 – September 8: 2019 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour
2019 World Tour Five Star BV events
- July 9–14: Five Star No. 1 in
Gstaad[7]
- Winners:
Norway (Anders Mol & Christian Sørum) (m) /
United States (April Ross & Alexandra Klineman) (f)
- Winners:
- July 31 – August 4: Five Star No. 2 (final) in
Vienna[8]
- Winners:
Norway (Anders Mol & Christian Sørum) (m) /
Canada (Sarah Pavan & Melissa Humana-Paredes) (f)
- Winners:
2019 World Tour Four Star BV events
- January 2–6: Four Star No. 1 in
The Hague[9]
- Winners:
Russia (Viacheslav Krasilnikov & Oleg Stoyanovskiy) (m) /
Brazil (Ana Patricia Silva Ramos & Rebecca Cavalcanti Barbosa Silva) (f)
- Winners:
- March 11–16: Four Star No. 2 in
Doha (men only)[10]
- Winners:
Chile (Marco Grimalt & Esteban Grimalt)
- Winners:
- April 24–28: Four Star No. 3 in
Xiamen[11]
- May 15–19: Four Star #4 in
Itapema[12]
- Winners:
Norway (Anders Mol & Christian Sørum) (m) /
United States (Alexandra Klineman & April Ross) (f)
- Winners:
- May 22–26: Four Star No. 5 in
Jinjiang, Fujian[13]
- Winners:
Norway (Anders Mol & Christian Sørum) (m) /
United States (Kerri Walsh Jennings & Brooke Sweat) (f)
- Winners:
- May 29 – June 2: Four Star No. 6 in
Ostrava[14]
- Winners:
Norway (Anders Mol & Christian Sørum) (m) /
Brazil (Ágatha Bednarczuk & Eduarda Santos Lisboa) (f)
- Winners:
- June 12–16: Four Star No. 7 in
Warsaw[15]
- Winners:
Brazil (Evandro Oliveira & Bruno Oscar Schmidt) (m) /
Australia (Mariafe Artacho del Solar & Taliqua Clancy) (f)
- Winners:
- July 17–21: Four Star No. 8 in
Espinho[16]
- Winners:
Brazil (Alison Cerutti & Álvaro Morais Filho) (m) /
Russia (Nadezda Makroguzova & Svetlana Kholomina) (f)
- Winners:
- July 24–28: Four Star No. 9 in
Tokyo[17]
- August 14–18: Four Star #10 in
Moscow[18]
- Winners:
Latvia (Aleksandrs Samoilovs & Jānis Šmēdiņš) (m) /
Switzerland (Anouk Vergé-Dépré & Joana Heidrich) (f)
- Winners:
- November 13–17: Four Star No. 11 in
Chetumal
2019 World Tour Three Star BV events
- March 6–10: Three Star No. 1 in
Sydney[19]
- Winners:
Chile (Marco Grimalt & Esteban Grimalt) (m) /
Australia (Becchara Palmer & Nicole Laird) (f)
- Winners:
- April 30 – May 4: Three Star No. 2 in
Kuala Lumpur[20]
- Winners:
Brazil (Alison Cerutti & Álvaro Morais Filho) (m) /
Czech Republic (Barbora Hermannová & Markéta Sluková) (f)
- Winners:
- July 17–21: Three Star No. 3 in
Edmonton[21]
- Winners:
Switzerland (Nico Beeler & Marco Krattiger) (m) /
Canada (Sarah Pavan & Melissa Humana-Paredes) (f)
- Winners:
- August 22–25: Three Star No. 4 in
Jūrmala (men only)[22]
- Winners:
Latvia (Aleksandrs Samoilovs & Jānis Šmēdiņš)
- Winners:
- October 30 – November 3: Three Star No. 5 in
Qinzhou[23]
- Winners:
Switzerland (Adrian Heidrich & Mirco Gerson) (m) /
Germany (Karla Borger & Julia Sude) (f)
- Winners:
2019 World Tour Two Star BV events
- February 21–24: Two Star No. 1 in
Phnom Penh (women only)[24]
- Winners:
Greece (Peny Karagkouni & Vassiliki Arvaniti)
- Winners:
- March 21–24: Two Star No. 2 in
Siem Reap (men only)[25]
- Winners:
Austria (Christoph Dressler & Alexander Huber)
- Winners:
- May 15–19: Two Star No. 3 in
Aydın[26]
- Winners:
Poland (Maciej Rudol & Jakub Szalankiewicz) (m) /
Russia (Maria Voronina & Mariia Bocharova) (f)
- Winners:
- May 30 – June 2: Two Star No. 4 in
Nantong (women only)[27]
- Winners:
China (WEN Shuhui & WANG Jingzhe)
- Winners:
- June 5–9: Two Star #5 in
Nanjing (women only)[28]
- Winners:
China (WEN Shuhui & WANG Jingzhe)
- Winners:
- July 4–7: Two Star #6 in
Qidong, Jiangsu[29]
- August 22–25: Two Star #7 in
Zhongwei (women only)[30]
- Winners:
China (WEN Shuhui & WANG Jingzhe)
- Winners:
2019 World Tour One Star BV events
- February 28 – March 3: One Star #1 in
Visakhapatnam[31]
- Winners:
Germany (Armin Dollinger & Simon Kulzer) (m) /
Czech Republic (Martina Bonnerová & Martina Maixnerova) (f)
- Winners:
- March 7–10: One Star #2 in
Kg Speu (men only)[32]
- Winners:
Russia (Maxim Sivolap & Artem Yarzutkin)
- Winners:
- April 4–7: One Star #3 in
Battambang (women only)[33]
- Winners:
United States (Lara Dykstra & Cassie House)
- Winners:
- April 8–11: One Star #4 in
Satun[34]
- Winners:
Ukraine (Denys Denysenko & Vladyslav Iemelianchyk) (m) /
Chinese Taipei (Kou Nai-han & LIU Pi-hsin) (f)
- Winners:
- April 11–14: One Star No. 5 in
Langkawi[35]
- Winners:
Russia (Daniil Kuvichka & Anton Kislytsyn) (m) /
United States (Lara Dykstra & Cassie House) (f)
- Winners:
- April 18–21: One Star #6 in
Gothenburg[36]
- Winners:
Belarus (Aliaksandr Dziadkou & Pavel Piatrushka) (m) /
Netherlands (Emi van Driel & Raïsa Schoon) (f)
- Winners:
- May 9–12: One Star #7 in
Tuần Châu (women only)[37]
- Winners:
Russia (Ksenia Dabizha & Daria Rudykh)
- Winners:
- May 23–26: One Star #8 in
Boracay[38]
- June 6–10: One Star #9 in
Baden[39]
- Winners:
Austria (Clemens Doppler & Alexander Horst) (m) /
Austria (Katharina Schützenhöfer & Lena Plesiutschnig) (f)
- Winners:
- June 14–16: One Star No. 10 in
Ios[40]
- July 11–14: One Star #11 in
Daegu (women only)[41]
- Winners:
Russia (Alexandra Moiseeva & Ekaterina Syrtseva)
- Winners:
- July 12–14: One Star No. 12 in
Alba Adriatica (women only)[42]
- Winners:
Netherlands (Emi van Driel & Raïsa Schoon)
- Winners:
- July 18–21: One Star #13 in
Ulsan (women only)
- Event cancelled.
- July 25–28: One Star No. 14 in
Pinarella Di Cervia (men only)[43]
- Winners:
Russia (Maksim Hudyakov & Igor Velichko)
- Winners:
- August 1–4: One Star #15 in
Ljubljana[44]
- August 1–4: One Star #16 in
Malbork (men only)[45]
- Winners:
Poland (Michal Kadziola & Marcin Ociepski)
- Winners:
- August 7–11: One Star #17 in
Vaduz[46]
- Winners:
Austria (Moritz Fabian Kindl & Mathias Seiser) (m) /
Netherlands (Emma Piersma & Pleun Ypma) (f)
- Winners:
- August 8–11: One Star #18 in
Miguel Pereira[47]
- August 8–11: One Star #19 in
Budapest[48]
- August 15–18: One Star #20 in
Knokke-Heist[49]
- August 21–24: One Star #21 in
Rubavu District[50]
- Winners:
Japan (Kensuke Shoji & Masato Kurasaka) (m) /
Netherlands (Iris Reinders & Mexime van Driel) (f)
- Winners:
- August 24–27: One Star #22 in
Salalah (men only)[51]
- Winners:
Denmark (Daniel Thomsen & Morten Overgaard)
- Winners:
- August 27–31: One Star #23 in
Montpellier (men only)[52]
- Winners:
Netherlands (Dirk Boehlé & Stefan Boermans)
- Winners:
- August 28 – September 1: One Star #24 in
Oslo (men only)[53]
- Winners:
Norway (Anders Mol & Nils Gunnar Ringøen)
- Winners:
- October 1–4: One Star No. 25 in
Bandar Torkaman (men only)[54]
- Winners:
Thailand (Nuttanon Inkiew & Sedtawat Padsawud)
- Winners:
- November 6–9: One Star #26 in
Tel Aviv[55]
- November 12–15: Aspire Beach Volleyball Cup (One Star #27) in
Doha[56]