2018 FIVB Men's Volleyball Challenger Cup

The 2018 FIVB Men's Volleyball Challenger Cup was the inaugural edition of the FIVB Men's Volleyball Challenger Cup, a new annual men's international volleyball tournament contested by six national teams that acts as a qualifier for the FIVB Men's Volleyball Nations League.[1][2][3] The tournament was held in Matosinhos, Portugal from 20 to 24 June 2018.[4]

2018 FIVB Men's Volleyball Challenger Cup
Challenger Cup de Masculino
Portugal 2018
Tournament details
Host nationPortugal
CityMatosinhos
Dates20–24 June
Teams6 (from 4 confederations)
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Champions Portugal (1st title)
Runners-up Czech Republic
Third place Estonia
Fourth place Cuba
Tournament statistics
Matches played10
Attendance11,952 (1,195 per match)
Best scorerCuba Miguel Gutiérrez (67 points)
Best spikerPortugal Alexandre Ferreira (58.89%)
Best blockerKazakhstan Nodirkhan Kadirkhanov (1.14 Avg)
Best serverPortugal Alexandre Ferreira (0.62 Avg)
Best setterChile Matias Banda (26.57 Avg)
Best diggerChile Dusan Bonacic (2.00 Avg)
Best receiverChile Vicente Parraguirre (32.73%)
Official website
Volleyball Challenger Cup
First

Portugal won the title, defeating Czech Republic in the final, and earned the right to participate in the 2019 Nations League replacing South Korea, the last placed challenger team after the 2018 edition. Estonia defeated Cuba in the 3rd place match.[5]

Qualification

A total of 6 teams qualified for the tournament.[1]

CountryConfederationQualified asQualified onPrevious appearancesPrevious best performance
TotalFirstLast
 Kazakhstan1AVC Asian Qualifier winners 20 May 20180NoneNone
 Chile1CSV South American Qualifier winners 20 May 20180NoneNone
 PortugalCEV Host country 6 June 20180NoneNone
 CubaNORCECA North American Qualifier winners 9 June 20180NoneNone
 EstoniaCEV 2018 European Golden League champions 13 June 20180NoneNone
 Czech RepublicCEV 2018 European Golden League runners-up 13 June 20180NoneNone
1.^ Originally, the CAVB would have a direct spot in the Challenger Cup, while the representatives from AVC and CSV would play a playoff for a spot. However, FIVB fined the CAVB for not hosting any kind of qualifier event and the winners of the AVC and CSV qualifier booked a direct qualification.[6]

Pools composition

Teams were seeded following the serpentine system according to their FIVB World Ranking as of 7 July 2017.[7] FIVB reserved the right to seed the hosts as head of pool A regardless of the World Ranking. Rankings are shown in brackets except the hosts who ranked 30th.

Pool APool B
 Portugal (Hosts)  Cuba (16)
 Estonia (32)  Czech Republic (27)
 Kazakhstan (35)  Chile (41)

Squads

Venue

  • Centro de Desportos e Congressos de Matosinhos, Matosinhos, Portugal

Pool standing procedure

  1. Number of matches won
  2. Match points
  3. Sets ratio
  4. Points ratio
  5. Result of the last match between the tied teams

Match won 3–0 or 3–1: 3 match points for the winner, 0 match points for the loser
Match won 3–2: 2 match points for the winner, 1 match point for the loser

Preliminary round

Pool A

PosTeamPldWLPtsSWSLSRSPWSPLSPRQualification
1  Portugal220660MAX1501131.327Semifinals
2  Estonia2113340.7501491610.925
3  Kazakhstan2020160.1671441690.852
Source: [citation needed]
DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
20 Jun21:00Portugal  3–0  Estonia25–1925–1625–20  75–55P2 Report
21 Jun18:00Estonia  3–1  Kazakhstan25–2219–2525–1925–20 94–86P2 Report
22 Jun21:00Kazakhstan  0–3  Portugal23–2519–2516–25  58–75P2 Report

Pool B

PosTeamPldWLPtsSWSLSRSPWSPLSPRQualification
1  Czech Republic220660MAX1501121.339Semifinals
2  Cuba2113340.7501791830.978
3  Chile2020160.1671581920.823
Source: [citation needed]
DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
20 Jun18:00Cuba  0–3  Czech Republic19–2522–2521–25  62–75P2 Report
21 Jun21:00Czech Republic  3–0  Chile25–1525–1725–18  75–50P2 Report
22 Jun18:00Chile  1–3  Cuba36–3822–2531–2919–25 108–117P2 Report

Final round

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
23 June – Matosinhos
 
 
 Czech Republic3
 
24 June – Matosinhos
 
 Estonia1
 
 Czech Republic1
 
23 June – Matosinhos
 
 Portugal3
 
 Portugal3
 
 
 Cuba0
 
3rd place match
 
 
24 June – Matosinhos
 
 
 Estonia3
 
 
 Cuba0

Semifinals

DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
23 Jun15:00Czech Republic  3–1  Estonia29–3127–2525–1825–21 106–95P2 Report
23 Jun18:00Portugal  3–0  Cuba25–2225–2126–24  76–67P2 Report

3rd place match

DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
24 Jun15:00Estonia  3–0  Cuba30–2825–2125–16  80–65Report

Final

DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
24 Jun18:00Czech Republic  1–3  Portugal25–1822–2519–2516–25 82–93Report

Final standing

Qualified for the 2019 Nations League

Source: VCC 2018 final standing

 2018 Men's Challenger Cup champions 

Portugal
First title
13–man Roster
Caique da Silva, José Belo, Filip Cveticanin, Marco Ferreira, Alexandre Ferreira (c), Januário Silva, José Monteiro, João Simões, Phelipe Martins, Lourenço Martins, Valdir Sequeira, Miguel Tavares Rodrigues, João Fidalgo
Head coach
Hugo Silva

See also

References