Asian Volleyball Confederation

Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC)
Abbreviation AVC
Formation 1952; 66 years ago
Type Sports organisation
Headquarters Bangkok, Thailand
Region served
Asia and Oceania
Membership
65 member associations
Official language
English
President
Saleh A. Bin Nasser
Parent organization
FIVB
Website AsianVolleyball.net

The Asian Volleyball Confederation, commonly known by the acronym AVC, is the governing body for the sports of indoor, beach and grass volleyball in Asia and Oceania. It has 65 member countries, mostly located on the Asian and Australian continents, but excludes the transcontinental countries with territory in both Europe and Asia – Azerbaijan, Georgia, Russia and Turkey – which are instead members of CEV. Three other states located along the western fringe of Asia – Armenia, Cyprus and Israel – are also CEV members.

The main headquarters is located in Bangkok, Thailand and the current president is Saleh A. Bin Nasser.

Profile

The Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC) was established on May 6, 1952,[1] and since then AVC has become one of the largest continental volleyball associations in the world, with its member federations increasing to 65 from only 12 at the time of its set-up. The first concept of the AVC was launched by the initiative of the late Mr. Nishikawa of Japan on April 1952, and on May 6 of the same year, AVC was officially established with 12 countries participating. The major tasks of AVC at the time were the organization of the men's and women's Asian Championships and the Volleyball Tournaments at the Asian Games.

In 1962, AVC was renamed the Asian Volleyball Federation (AVF) with 20 affiliated national federations after the FIVB Congress held in September 1961 decided to establish the continental zone committee.

The first Congress of the Asian sport Committee (ASC) was held in Tokyo with 22 national federations on October 8, 1964 and Mr. Nishikawa was elected Chairman of the ASC. Due to the revisions of the FIVB Constitution, the ASC was renamed as the Asian Volleyball Confederation. In November 1976 an extraordinary General Assembly was held in Tokyo and elected Mr. Maeda of Japan as AVC President (from 1976-1985) and at the 6th AVC General Assembly Mr. Yasutaka Matsudaira, also from Japan, in November 1985 replaced Mr. Maeda to become AVC President. The two AVC Presidents concentrated their efforts to reorganize and consolidate the AVC organizations and its activities step by step. Asian Senior Men's and Women's Championships, Asian Junior Men's and Women's Championships began to be held on a regular basis; the Board of Administration and the 8 Technical Committees meetings are held annually, and the General Assembly is held every other year.

In 2008, the Asian Volleyball Confederation elected Mr. Saleh Bin Nasser of the Saudi Arabia as its new president. He replaced Mr. Wei Jizhong (Chinese: 魏纪中) of China as the leader of AVC. On 19 June 2008, Mr. Wei Jizhong was elected as the third president in the history of the FIVB during the 31st FIVB World Congress in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The handover of the FIVB presidency took place on 24 August 2008 in Beijing, China.

List of presidents

# Period Nat Name
1 1952-1985[2] Japan Nishikawa
2 1985-1997 Japan Y. Matsudaira
3 1997-2001 China Yuan Weimin
4 2001-2008 China Wei Jizhong
5 2008-present Saudi Arabia Saleh A. Bin Nasser

Member associations

The AVC has 65 member associations split into five subzones. In the spirit of the FIVB 2001 Plan, AVC was the first to create five Zonal Associations at the 10th General Assembly in December 1993 prior to the FIVB Centennial Congress on September 1994.

  • 14 from Central Asia (including South Asia and Iran)
  • 8 from East Asia
  • 20 from Oceania
  • 11 from Southeast Asia
  • 12 from West Asia (excluding Iran)
CodeAssociationNational teamsIOC
member
OCA
member
ONOC
member
Central Asia
AFGAfghanistan Afghanistan(M, W)YesYesNo
BGDBangladesh Bangladesh(M, W)YesYesNo
BTNBhutan Bhutan(M, W)YesYesNo
INDIndia India(M, W)YesYesNo
IRIIran Iran(M, W)YesYesNo
KAZKazakhstan Kazakhstan(M, W)YesYesNo
KGZKyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan(M, W)YesYesNo
MDVMaldives Maldives(M, W)YesYesNo
NEPNepal Nepal(M, W)YesYesNo
PAKPakistan Pakistan(M, W)YesYesNo
SRISri Lanka Sri Lanka(M, W)YesYesNo
TJKTajikistan Tajikistan(M, W)YesYesNo
TKMTurkmenistan Turkmenistan(M, W)YesYesNo
UZBUzbekistan Uzbekistan(M, W)YesYesNo
East Asia
CHNChina China(M, W)YesYesNo
HKGHong Kong Hong Kong(M, W)YesYesNo
JPNJapan Japan(M, W)YesYesNo
KORSouth Korea South Korea(M, W)YesYesNo
MACMacau Macau(M, W)NoYesNo
MGLMongolia Mongolia(M, W)YesYesNo
PRKNorth Korea North Korea(M, W)YesYesNo
TPE Chinese Taipei(M, W)YesYesNo
Oceania
ASAAmerican Samoa American Samoa(M, W)YesNoYes
AUSAustralia Australia(M, W)YesNoYes
COKCook Islands Cook Islands(M, W)YesNoYes
FJIFiji Fiji(M, W)YesNoYes
FSMFederated States of Micronesia Federated States of Micronesia(M, W)YesNoYes
GUMGuam Guam(M, W)YesNoYes
KIRKiribati Kiribati(M, W)YesNoYes
MHLMarshall Islands Marshall Islands(M, W)YesNoYes
MNPNorthern Mariana Islands Northern Mariana(M, W)NoNoYes
NIUNiue Niue(M, W)NoNoYes
NRUNauru Nauru(M, W)YesNoYes
NZLNew Zealand New Zealand(M, W)YesNoYes
PLWPalau Palau(M, W)YesNoYes
PLYFrench Polynesia French Polynesia(M, W)NoNoYes
PNGPapua New Guinea Papua New Guinea(M, W)YesNoYes
SLMSolomon Islands Solomon Islands(M, W)YesNoYes
TONTonga Tonga Islands(M, W)YesNoYes
TUVTuvalu Tuvalu(M, W)YesNoYes
VUTVanuatu Vanuatu(M, W)YesNoYes
WSMSamoa Samoa(M, W)YesNoYes
Southeast Asia
BRNBrunei Brunei(M, W)YesYesNo
CAMCambodia Cambodia(M, W)YesYesNo
INAIndonesia Indonesia(M, W)YesYesNo
LAOLaos Laos(M, W)YesYesNo
MASMalaysia Malaysia(M, W)YesYesNo
MYAMyanmar Myanmar(M, W)YesYesNo
PHIPhilippines Philippines(M, W)YesYesNo
SINSingapore Singapore(M, W)YesYesNo
THAThailand Thailand(M, W)YesYesNo
TLSEast Timor East Timor(M, W)YesYesNo
VIEVietnam Vietnam(M, W)YesYesNo
West Asia
BHRBahrain Bahrain(M, W)YesYesNo
IRQIraq Iraq(M, W)YesYesNo
JORJordan Jordan(M, W)YesYesNo
KSASaudi Arabia Saudi Arabia(M, W)YesYesNo
KUWKuwait Kuwait(M, W)YesYesNo
LBNLebanon Lebanon(M, W)YesYesNo
OMNOman Oman(M, W)YesYesNo
PSEState of Palestine Palestine(M, W)YesYesNo
QATQatar Qatar(M, W)YesYesNo
SYRSyria Syria(M, W)YesYesNo
UAEUnited Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates(M, W)YesYesNo
YMNYemen Yemen(M, W)YesYesNo

Competitions

Current title holders

Volleyball

Senior

Edition Champion Location Number of Entrants
Men's Championship 2017  Japan Gresik, Indonesia 16
Women's Championship 2017  Japan Biñan and Muntinlupa, Philippines 14
Men's Asian Games 2018  Iran Jakarta, Indonesia 20
Women's Asian Games 2018  China Jakarta, Indonesia 11
Men's Cup 2018  Qatar Taipei, Chinese Taipei 9
Women's Cup 2018  China Vĩnh Phúc, Vietnam 10
Men's Pacific Games 2015  French Polynesia Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea 12
Women's Pacific Games 2015  American Samoa Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea 9
Men's Challenge Cup 2018  Iraq Colombo, Sri Lanka 8
Women's Challenge Cup 2018 Hong Kong, Hong Kong 8

Under age

Edition Champion Location Number of Entrants
Asian Men's Under-23 2017  Iran Ardabil, Iran 11
Asian Women's Under-23 2017  Japan Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand 13
Asian Men's Under-20 2018  Iran Riffa, Bahrain 23
Asian Women's Under-19 2018  Japan Bac Ninh, Vietnam 13
Asian Men’s Under-18 2018  Japan Tabriz, Iran 17
Asian Women's Under-17 2018  Japan Nakhon Pathom, Thailand 12

Club

Edition Champion National Title Location Number of Entrants
Men's Club 2018 Khatam Ardakan Iran Iranian Super League Naypyidaw, Myanmar 13
Women's Club 2018 Supreme Chonburi-E.Tech Thailand Thailand League Ust-Kamenogorsk, Kazakhstan 9

Beach volleyball

Senior

Edition Champion Location Number of Entrants
Men's Championship 2017  Rahman Raoufi
and Bahman Salemi (IRI)
Songkhla, Thailand 32
Women's Championship 2017  Louise Bawden
and Taliqua Clancy (AUS)
Songkhla, Thailand 28
Men's Continental Cup 2016  Qatar Cairns, Australia 31
Women's Continental Cup 2016  Australia Cairns, Australia 23
Men's Asian Beach Games 2016  Jefferson Pereira
and Cherif Younousse (QAT)
Da Nang, Vietnam 32
Women's Asian Beach Games 2016  Varapatsorn Radarong
and Tanarattha Udomchavee (THA)
Da Nang, Vietnam 21

Beach volleyball

Competitions Champion Title Next edition
Nations Men
Asian Championship  Isaac KapaChris McHugh (AUS) 3rd 2017
Asian Continental Cup  Qatar 1st TBA
Asian Games  Alexey SidorenkoAlexandr Dyachenko (KAZ) 1st 2018
Asian Beach Games  Jefferson PereiraCherif Younousse (QAT) 1st 2020
Asian U-21 Championship  Paul BurnettMarcus Ferguson (AUS) 1st TBA
Asian U-19 Championship  Konsiphong Vaikuntha-AnuchitKeattisak Naksompoi (THA) 1st TBA
Nations Women
Asian Championship  Xue ChenXia Xinyi (CHN) 1st 2017
Asian Continental Cup  Australia 1st TBA
Asian Games  Ma YuanyuanXia Xinyi (CHN) 1st 2018
Asian Beach Games  Varapatsorn RadarongTanarattha Udomchavee (THA) 1st 2020
Asian U-21 Championship  Pawarun ChanthawichaiThatsarida Singchuea (THA) 1st TBA
Asian U-19 Championship  Napwan Khongchaloem Sirinuch Kawfong (THA) 1st TBA

Rankings

AVC Executive Committee

President
  • Saleh A. Bin Nasser
Vice Presidents
  • Essa Hamza – First Vice President
  • Rita Subowo – Second Vice President
  • M.R. Davarzani – Central Asia Zone Vice President
  • Cai Yi – East Asia Zone Vice President
  • Craig Carracher – Oceania Zone Vice President
  • Shanrit Wongprasert – South East Asia Zone Vice President
  • Mr. Ibrahim A. Malik Mohammed – West Zone Vice President
Members
  • Fong S.V. Alice Oliver – E/C Member
  • Khalid Ali Al-Mawlawi
  • Jehad Hasan Khlafan
  • Yermek Syrlybayev
  • Mohamed Riyaz
  • Eom Han-Joo
  • Kenji Kimura
  • Wang Kuei-Shiang
  • Le Tri Truong
  • Jose A. Romasanta
  • Hugh Graham
  • Terry Sasser
Auditor
  • Waleed A.Aman

Sponsors

Sponsors of the Asian Volleyball Confederation

See also

References

  1. "AVC History". asianvolleyball.net. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  2. MM-Presidents
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