European Volleyball Confederation

Sports governing body From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The European Volleyball Confederation (French: Confédération Européenne de Volleyball or CEV) is the continental governing body for the sports of indoor volleyball, beach volleyball and snow volleyball in Europe. Its headquarters is in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg.[1]

JurisdictionInternational
AbbreviationCEV
Founded1963; 63 years ago (1963)
Quick facts Jurisdiction, Membership ...
European Volleyball Confederation
Confédération Européenne de Volleyball
JurisdictionInternational
Membership56 member associations
AbbreviationCEV
Founded1963; 63 years ago (1963)
AffiliationFIVB
HeadquartersLuxembourg City, Luxembourg
LocationEurope
PresidentCroatia Roko Sikirić
Official website
www.cev.eu
Close

Profile

Although the CEV was formed on 21 October 1963, in Bucharest, Romania[1] volleyball became popular in Europe many years before. The majority of the teams that attended the Congress which eventually led to the foundation of the FIVB in 1947 were from this continent. The foundation is supposed[by whom?] to have been a move on the part of European national federations.

Volleyball was invented in the United States and became an extremely popular sport in eastern Europe when introduced by American soldiers during World War I. By the middle of the century, it had spread through the rest of the continent. Many techniques and tactics commonplace in modern volleyball were introduced by European teams.

The long and significant tradition of the sport in the continent may at least partially account for the administrative structure employed by the CEV, which rivals the FIVB's in size and comprehensiveness. It is the biggest of all volleyball confederations and organizes the most annual competitions and tournaments. As of 2005, its headquarters are located in Luxembourg.

As the presiding entity over European volleyball federations, the CEV organizes continental competitions such as the prestigious European Championship (first edition, 1948), the CEV Cup and the European League. It participates in the organization of qualification tournaments for major events such as the Olympic Games, men's and women's world championships and international competitions of its affiliated federations.

The CEV family increased its membership to 56 Federations following the approval of Kosovo on the opening day of the 35th FIVB World Congress held on 5 October 2016, in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

In response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the CEV banned all Russian national teams, clubs and officials from participating in European competition, and suspended all Russians from their respective functions in CEV organs.[2] It also canceled all competitions in Russia.[3] In March 2026, the CEV allowed the Russian youth national teams to participate in tournaments with a flag and an anthem.[4]

Affiliated federations

As of 2022, the following 56 national federations are CEV affiliates, listed alphabetically.

More information Code, Nation ...
CodeNationFederation
ALB AlbaniaFederata Shqiptare e Volejbollit
AND AndorraFederació Andorrana de Voleibol
ARM ArmeniaHayastani Voleyboli Federats’ia
AUT AustriaÖsterreichischer Volleyball Verband
AZE AzerbaijanAzərbaycan Voleybol Federasiyası
BLR BelarusBielaruskaja Fiederacjya Valiejbola
BEL BelgiumFédération Royale Belge de Volleyball
BIH Bosnia and HerzegovinaOdbojkaški savez Bosne i Hercegovine
BUL BulgariaBulgarska Federatsiya Volejbol
CRO CroatiaHrvatski odbojkaški savez
CYP CyprusKypriakí Omospondía Petosfaírisis
CZE Czech RepublicČeský Volejbalový Svaz
DEN DenmarkDansk Volleyball Forbund
ENG EnglandVolleyball England
EST EstoniaEesti Võrkpalli Liit
FAR Faroe IslandsFlogbóltssamband Føroya
FIN FinlandSuomen Lentopalloliitto F. Y.
FRA FranceFédération Française de Volleyball
GEO GeorgiaSakartvelos Prenburtis Pedaratsia
GER GermanyDeutscher Volleyball Verband
GIB GibraltarGibraltar Volleyball Association
GRE GreeceEllinikí Omospondía Petosfaírisis
GRL GreenlandKalaallit Nunaanni Volleyballertartut Kattuffiat
HUN HungaryMagyar Röplabda Szövetség
ISL IcelandBlaksamband Íslands
IRL IrelandVolleyball Ireland
ISR IsraelIgud HaKadur'af BeIsrael
ITA ItalyFederazione Italiana Pallavolo
KOS KosovoFederata e Volejbollit e Kosovës
LAT LatviaLatvijas volejbola federācija
LIE LiechtensteinLiechtensteiner Volleyball Verband
LTU LithuaniaLietuvos tinklinio federacija
LUX LuxembourgFédération Luxembourgeoise de Volleyball
MLT MaltaMalta Volleyball Association
MLD MoldovaFederaţia Moldovenească de Volei
MON MonacoFédération Monégasque de Volleyball
MNE MontenegroOdbojkaški savez Crne Gore
NED NetherlandsNederlandse Volleybalbond
MKD North MacedoniaOdbojkarska Federacija na Makedonija
NIR Northern Ireland[5]Northern Ireland Volleyball Association
NOR NorwayNorges Volleyballforbund
POL PolandPolski Związek Piłki Siatkowej
POR PortugalFederação Portuguesa de Voleibol
ROU RomaniaFederaţia Română de Volei
RUS RussiaFederetsiya Voleybola Rossii
SMR San MarinoFederazione Sammarinese Pallavolo
SCO ScotlandScottish Volleyball Association
SRB SerbiaOdbojkaški savez Srbije
SVK SlovakiaSlovenská Volejbalová Federácia
SLO SloveniaOdbojkarska Zveza Slovenije
ESP SpainReal Federación Española de Voleibol
SWE SwedenSvenska Volleybollförbundet
SUI SwitzerlandSwiss Volley
TUR TurkeyTürkiye Voleybol Federasyonu
UKR UkraineUkrayins'ka Federetsiya Voleybolu
WAL WalesPêl-foli Cymru
Close

FIVB world rankings

More information CEV*, FIVB ...
Close

Competitions

Title holders

Volleyball

More information Championship, League ...
Championship League U22 U20 U18 U16 Champions League CEV Cup Challenge Cup
Men  Poland
(2023)
 Finland
(2025)
 France
(2024)
 France
(2024)
 France
(2024)
 Italy
(2025)
Italy Sir Safety Umbria Perugia
(2024–25)
Turkey Ziraat Bank Ankara
(2024–25)
Poland LKPS Lublin
(2024–25)
Women  Turkey
(2023)
 Ukraine
(2025)
 Italy
(2024)
 Turkey
(2024)
 Bulgaria
(2024)
 Poland
(2025)
Italy Imoco Volley Conegliano
(2024–25)
Turkey Galatasaray Daikin
(2025–26)
Italy Roma Volley
(2024–25)
Close

Zonal associations

Zones

The CEV is divided into six zonal associations largely based on geography:[12]

  1. Balkan Volleyball Association (BVA) (1998) – 11 national federations, BVA Cup[13]
  2. Eastern European Volleyball Zonal Association (EEVZA) (2005) – 10 national federations [14]
  3. Middle European Volleyball Zonal Association (MEVZA) (2002) – 8+1 national federations, MEVZA League[15]
  4. North European Volleyball Zonal Association (NEVZA) (2002) – 8 national federations [16]
  5. Western European Volleyball Zonal Association (WEVZA) (2013) – 8 national federations [17]
  6. Small Countries Association (SCA) (1986) – 13+2 national federations, SCA Championship[18]

Members

  1. ALB,BIH,BUL,GRE,KOS,MDA,MKD,MNE,ROU,SRB,TUR
  2. ARM,AZE,BLR,EST,GEO,LAT,LTU,POL,RUS,UKR
  3. AUT,CRO,CYP,CZE,HUN,ISR,LUX,SVK,SLO
  4. DEN,ENG,FRO,FIN,GRL,ISL,NOR,SWE
  5. BEL,FRA,GER,ITA,NED,POR,ESP,SUI
  6. MLT,SMR,GIB,AND,MON,LIE,LUX,WAL,IRL,NIR,SCO+ISL,GRL,FRO,CYP

Sponsors

More information Sponsors of CEV ...
Sponsors of CEV
Mikasa Sports, Sberbank, DenizBank, DHL, Gerflor [citation needed]
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI