Beach Volleyball Major Series

The Beach Volleyball Major Series (or Beach Major Series and formerly the Swatch Beach Volleyball Major Series) was an international series of beach volleyball tournaments from 2015 to 2020. The tournaments consisted of Tour Stops and formed part of the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour. The series concluded with the FIVB World Tour Finals.

Beach Volleyball Major Series
Full nameBeach Volleyball Major Series
RegionInternational
Date spanFebruary–September
TournamentsMen & Women
TypeBeach volleyball
CEOHannes Jagerhofer
History
First tour2015
Number of tour stops4 (2015), 5 (2016), 4 (2017), 4 (2018), 2 (2019)
Most tournament wins
Women (team)Brazil Talita/Larissa (5 wins)
Men (team)Norway Mol/Sørum (5 wins)
Present World Tour Final winners
WomenGermany Ludwig/Kozuch
MenRussia Krasilnikov/Stoyanovskiy

Each tournament in the series had a prize pool of US$300,000 per gender, except for the World Tour Finals which had a prize pool of US$400,000 per gender.[1]

History edit

The Beach Volleyball Major Series arose out of a joint-venture between Austrian companies Red Bull and the ACTS Group.[2]

Red Bull was established in 1987 by Dietrich Mateschitz. Aside from the energy drink, Red Bull's direct marketing focuses heavily on sports and lifestyle.

ACTS Group is a marketing agency founded in 1990 by Hannes Jagerhofer.[3] It offers services including event-marketing, event-organization, external-communication and public relations. The group has also been responsible for the organizing beach volleyball tournaments, including the FIVB Grand Slams in Klagenfurt, Carinthia, Austria.

Swatch was the title sponsor of the Swatch Beach Volleyball Major Series between 2015 and 2017.

The Series will not continue because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Relation to the FIVB edit

The competition was overseen by the FIVB, the international governing body for the sports of indoor, beach and grass volleyball.[4]

In the category of Beach Volleyball, the FIVB oversees three competitions, namely: the FIVB Beach Volleyball Continental Cup, the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour and lastly the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships.

The Beach Volleyball Major Series formed part of the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour.

Olympic qualification edit

Beach volleyball was formally recognized as an Olympic discipline in 1996. In order for a beach volleyball athlete to participate in the Olympics, minimum requirements must be met and one of these requirements as stipulated by the FIVB is that all athletes must have participated in a minimum of 12 official FIVB Olympic qualification tournaments as an individual.

Also an athlete hoping to participate in the Olympics must earn FIVB World Ranking points which tallies up to make up the Olympic Ranking.

Participation in Major Series tournaments counts towards Olympic qualification tournaments and also earns athletes FIVB World Ranking points. An exception is the FIVB World Tour Finals – participating teams do not earn FIVB World Ranking points for this event.

In 2016, the smart Major Hamburg was the final tournament where Olympic ranking points for the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro could be obtained.[5]

Tournaments edit

2015 edit

The first Beach Volleyball Major Series began in 2015. There were Tour Stops in Poreč, Croatia; Stavanger, Norway and Gstaad, Switzerland. The Swatch Beach Volleyball FIVB World Tour Finals took place in Fort Lauderdale Florida, United States.

Dates Tour Stop Major Host country Men's winners Women's winners
2–7 June Poreč Poreč Major   Croatia Brouwer/Meewusen  [6] Larissa/Talita  [7]
9–12 June Stavanger Stavanger Major   Norway Evandro/Pedro Solberg  [8] Juliana/Antonelli  [9]
7–12 July Gstaad Gstaad Major   Switzerland Alison/Bruno Schmidt  [10] Larissa/Talita  [11]
29-Sept-4 Oct Fort Lauderdale Swatch Beach Volleyball FIVB World Tour Finals   United States Alison/Bruno Schmidt  [12] Larissa/Talita  [13]

2016 edit

The 2016 Major Series schedule began in Hamburg, Germany, and took in further stops in Croatia, Switzerland and Klagenfurt in Austria. The Series culminated with the Swatch Beach Volleyball FIVB World Tour Finals in Toronto.

Dates Tour Stop Major Host country Men's winners Women's winners
7–12 June Hamburg smart Major Hamburg   Germany Lucena/Dalhausser  [14][15] Ludwig/Walkenhorst  [16][17]
28-Jun-3 Jul Poreč Poreč Major   Croatia Alison/Bruno Schmidt   Laboureur/Sude  
5–10 July Gstaad Gstaad Major   Switzerland Evandro/Pedro Solberg   Larissa/Talita  
26–31 July Klagenfurt A1 Major Klagenfurt/Kärnten   Austria Samoilovs/Smedins   Ludwig/Walkenhorst  
13–18 September Toronto Swatch Beach Volleyball FIVB World Tour Finals   Canada Alison/Bruno Schmidt   Ludwig/Walkenhorst  

2017 edit

The 2017 Major Series schedule was released in October 2016.[18] As part of the FIVB World Tour, the Swatch Major Series did include trips to Poreč and Gstaad. The 2017 tour began in February in Fort Lauderdale, the site of the 2015 World Tour Finals. The 2017 Finals were held in August in Hamburg. The Swatch Major Series was also responsible for the organization of the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships in Vienna in July and August.[19]

Dates Tour Stop Major Host country Men's winners Women's winners
7–12 February Fort Lauderdale Fort Lauderdale Major   United States Alvaro/Saymon   Larissa/Talita  
27-Jun-2 Jul Poreč Poreč Major   Croatia Guto/Pedro Solberg   Pavan/Humana-Paredes  
4–9 July Gstaad Gstaad Major   Switzerland Lucena/Dalhausser   Laboureur/Sude  
22–27 August Hamburg Swatch Beach Volleyball FIVB World Tour Finals   Germany Lucena/Dalhausser   Ludwig/Walkenhorst  

2018 edit

Dates Tour Stop Major Host country Men's winners Women's winners
27 Feb - 4 Apr Fort Lauderdale Fort Lauderdale Major   United States Lucena/Dalhausser   Seixas/Alves  
5–10 July Gstaad Gstaad Major   Switzerland Mol/Sørum   Humana-Paredes/Pavan  
31 Jul –5 Aug Vienna Vienna Major   Austria Mol/Sørum   Hermannová/Sluková  
14–19 August Hamburg FIVB World Tour Finals   Germany Mol/Sørum   Agatha/Duda  

2019 edit

Dates Tour Stop Major Host country Men's winners Women's winners
9 - 14 July Gstaad Gstaad Major   Switzerland Mol/Sørum   Klineman/Ross  
31 Jul - 4 Aug Vienna Vienna Major   Austria Mol/Sørum   Pavan/Melissa  

2020 edit

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all three tournaments as well as the whole Beach Volleyball Major Series have been cancelled .[20] [21]

Dates Tour Stop Major Host country Men's winners Women's winners
7–12 July Gstaad Gstaad Major   Switzerland Cancelled Cancelled
12–16 August Vienna Vienna Major   Austria Cancelled Cancelled
19–23 August Hamburg Hamburg Major   Germany Cancelled Cancelled

Mascot edit

The Major Series' official mascot was Marnin. Unveiled prior to the 2016 season, Marnin is described as a cross between a kangaroo and a fox.[22] Marnin made his debut courtside on the FIVB Tour at the Hamburg Major.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "FIVB Sports Regulations: Beach Volleyball" (PDF). Fédération Internationale de Volleyball. November 30, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2018.
  2. ^ Beach Majors GmbH (2015-09-17). "Swatch Beach Volleyball Major Series | About". Swatch Major Series. Retrieved 2018-08-22.
  3. ^ "Event Agentur Wien, Web Agentur Wien, Marketing Agentur Wien". Archived from the original on 2016-06-11. Retrieved 2016-06-15.
  4. ^ "FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour 2015". www.fivb.org.
  5. ^ "smart Major Hamburg". www.fivb.org.
  6. ^ "Porec MAJOR". www.fivb.org.
  7. ^ "Porec MAJOR". www.fivb.org.
  8. ^ "Stavanger MAJOR". www.fivb.org.
  9. ^ "Stavanger MAJOR". www.fivb.org.
  10. ^ "Gstaad MAJOR". www.fivb.org.
  11. ^ "Gstaad MAJOR". www.fivb.org.
  12. ^ "Ft. Lauderdale Swatch Beach Volleyball FIVB World Tour Finals". www.fivb.org.
  13. ^ "Ft. Lauderdale Swatch Beach Volleyball FIVB World Tour Finals". www.fivb.org.
  14. ^ "Dalhausser/Lucena close 2016 Olympic qualification with a gold". Archived from the original on June 24, 2016.
  15. ^ "smart Major Hamburg". www.fivb.org.
  16. ^ beach-volleyball.de. "beach-volleyball.de: Gold für Ludwig/Walkenhorst beim Hamburg Major". www.beach-volleyball.de.
  17. ^ "smart Major Hamburg". www.fivb.org.
  18. ^ "News". www.fivb.com.
  19. ^ "FIVB - Volleyball". www.fivb.org.
  20. ^ "Beachvolleyball: Major auf Wiener Donauinsel abgesagt". 25 March 2020.
  21. ^ ""Aus diesem Grund haben wir auch den Gedanken der Major Series ad acta gelegt..."". www.leadersnet.at (in German). Retrieved 2020-10-14.
  22. ^ "Hi everybody, I'm Marnin!".

External links edit