Confederación Sudamericana de Voleibol

Confederación Sudamericana de Voleibol (CSV)

CSV logo
Formation 1946
Type Sports organisation
Headquarters Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Location
Membership
12 nations
Official language
Spanish and Portuguese
President
Colombia Rafael Lloreda
Website www.VoleySur.org

Confederación Sudamericana de Voleibol (CSV) or Portuguese Confederação Sul-americana de Voleibol is the continental governing body for the sport of volleyball in South America. Its headquarters is located in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Profile

The CSV's origins are still under dispute. Some argue it was founded in Buenos Aires, Argentina on February 12, 1946; some, that it was founded in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on July 3 of the same year. Either way, it was formed even before the FIVB itself, and stands as the oldest of all volleyball continental confederations.

Up to now (2004), the CSV has had a total of eight presidents, all but one from national federations with some volleyball tradition at a certain point in history: Brazil, Peru, Argentina, Venezuela and Colombia, which is the exception. Following the election of the current president, Brazilian Mr. Ary Graça Filho, in 2003 the headquarters were relocated from Lima, Peru to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The CSV presides over national volleyball federations located in South America and organizes continental competitions such as the South American Volleyball Championship (first edition, 1951) and the Pan American Games, sometimes in conjunction with the FIVB and with other confederations, notably NORCECA with whom CSV co-organises the Pan-American tournaments. It also takes part in the organization of qualification tournaments for major events such as the Olympic Games or the men's and women's World Championships, and of international competitions hosted by one of its affiliated federations.[1]

Teams

Lately, the only national South American federation with expressive results in international competitions is Brazil, which maintains intensive development programs for men's and women's volleyball.

Argentina has some tradition in men's volleyball, but it has shown unmistakable signs of decline: in recent years, Venezuela has been constantly threatening to take its long held position as the second volleyball force of the continent. However, Argentina is still one of the dominant forces in Men's volleyball.

With a silver medal at the Seoul Olympic Games, Peru had a very strong women's volleyball team in the 1980s. Its level of play has nevertheless dropped after the retirement of superstar players like Cecilia Tait, Natalia Málaga, Rosa García and Gabriela Pérez del Solar. Nevertheless, Peru is still a respectively good team, and one of the main forces of the continent.

In recent years, the Junior and Youth categories in both boys and girls categories have started to shine in the CSV; as with their senior teams, Brazil in one of the world main forces in Junior and Youth categories but Argentina and Peru have started to shine in the Boys and Girls category respectively; after the I Youth Olympic Games where Argentinean boys got silver and Peruvian girls took bronze, Argentina claimed the top spot and Peru the third spot at the FIVB World Rankings.[2]

Affiliated federations

As of 2004, the following national federations were affiliated to the CSV:[2]

CodeCountryFederation
ARG ArgentinaFederación Argentina de Voleibol (FEVA)
BOL BoliviaFederación Boliviana de Voleibol
BRA BrazilConfederação Brasileira de Voleibol
CHI ChileFederación de Voleibol de Chile
COL ColombiaFederación Colombiana de Voleibol
ECU EcuadorFederación Ecuatoriana de Voleibol
GUF French Guiana Ligue de Guiane de Volley-Ball
GUY GuyanaGuyana Volleyball Federation
PAR ParaguayFederación Paraguaya de Voleibol
PER PeruFederación Peruana de Voleibol
URU UruguayFederación Uruguaya de Voleibol
VEN VenezuelaFederación Venezolana de Voleibol

Tournaments

Organised entirely by CSV

Male

Female

Current champions

Senior
Championship
U23 Championship
(M / W)
Junior Championship
(M / W)
Youth Championship
(M / W)
Child Championship
(M / W)
Club Championship
(M / W)
Men  Brazil (2015)  Brazil (2014)  Brazil (2014)  Argentina (2014)  Argentina (2014) Brazil Sada Cruzeiro (2016)
Women  Brazil (2015)  Brazil (2014)  Brazil (2014)  Brazil (2014)  Peru (2015) Brazil Rexona Ades Rio (2015)

Organised alongside NORCECA

Male

Female

Current champions

Senior Pan-American Cup
(M / W)
U23 Pan-American Cup
(M / W)
Junior Pan-American Cup
(M / W)
Youth Pan-American Cup
(M / W)
Men  Brazil (2015)  Cuba (2014)  Brazil (2015)  Brazil (2011)
Women  United States (2015)  Dominican Republic (2014)  Dominican Republic (2015)  Argentina (2015)

Beach Tournaments

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.