The history of Olympic volleyball
traces back to the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris, where volleyball
was played as part of an American sports demonstration event. After the foundation of FIVB and
some continental confederations, it began to be considered for official
inclusion. In 1957, a special tournament was held at the 53rd IOC session in Sofia, Bulgaria to
support such request. The competition was a success, and the sport was
officially included in the program for the 1964 Summer Olympics.
The Olympic volleyball tournament was
originally a simple competition: all teams played against each other team and
then were ranked by wins, set average, and point average. One disadvantage of
this round-robin system is that medal winners
could be determined before the end of the games, making the audience lose
interest in the outcome of the remaining matches. To cope with this situation,
the competition was split into two phases with the addition of a "final
round" elimination tournament consisting of quarterfinals, semifinals, and
finals matches in 1972. The number of teams involved in the
Olympic tournament has grown steadily since 1964. Since 1996, both men's and
women's events count twelve participant nations. Each of the five continental
volleyball confederations has at least one affiliated national federation
involved in the Olympic Games.
The U.S.S.R. won men's gold in both
1964 and 1968. After taking bronze in 1964 and silver in 1968, Japan finally
won the gold for men's volleyball in 1972. Women's gold went to Japan in 1964
and again in 1976. That year, the introduction of a new offensive skill, the
backrow attack, allowed Poland to win the men's competition over the Soviets in
a very tight five-set match. Since the strongest teams in men's volleyball at
the time belonged to the Eastern Bloc, the American-ledboycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics did not have as great an effect
on these events as it had on the women's. The U.S.S.R. collected their third
Olympic Gold Medal in men's volleyball with a 3–1 victory over Bulgaria (the
Soviet women won that year as well, their third gold as well). With the
U.S.S.R. boycotting the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, the U.S. was able
to sweep Brazil in the finals to win the men's gold medal. Italy won its first
medal (bronze in the men's competition) in 1984, foreshadowing a rise in
prominence for their volleyball teams. The 1984 women's tournament was also won
by a rising force, China.
At the 1988 Games, Karch Kiraly and Steve Timmons led
the U.S. men's team to a second straight gold medal, and the Soviets won the fourth
gold in the women's tournament. In 1992, underrated Brazil upset favourites
C.I.S., Netherlands, and Italy in the men's competition for the country's first
volleyball Olympic gold medal. Runner-up Netherlands, men's silver medalist in
1992, came back under team leaders Ron Zwerver and Olof van der Meulen in the
1996 Games for a five-set win over Italy. A men's bronze medalist in 1996, Serbia and Montenegro (playing in 1996 and 2000 as the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) beat Russia in the gold medal match in 2000,
winning their first gold medal ever. In all three games the strong Cuban female team
led by Regla Torres and Mireya Luis won
the Gold medal. In 2004, Brazil won its second men's volleyball gold medal
beating Italy in the finals, while China beat Russia for
its second women's title. In the 2008 Games, the USA beat Brazil in the men's
volleyball final. Brazil was runner-up again at the 2012 Summer Olympics, this time losing to Russia after
losing two match points in the third set. In both games Brazil's women team beat the United States for the
gold medal.
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