Prague hosted the first edition of the Men’s World Championship in 1949
The FIVB Volleyball Men’s World Championship is the oldest world-level competition on the volleyball calendar and the sport’s most prestigious event. From August 26 through September 11, it will hold its 20th edition in Poland and Slovenia after it was launched 73 years ago, in 1949.
Two years after the FIVB was founded in 1947, it organised its first Men’s World Championship in the capital of Czechoslovakia, Prague in September 1949. Initially, Uruguay were supposed to take part, but after their withdrawal, the tournament was an all-European affair with 10 participating teams. The first set of medals were claimed by the USSR, hosts Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria.
The Moscow 1952 World Championship attracted about 25 thousand spectators on each competition day
In 1952, the first world champions hosted the second edition in Moscow. Among the 11 competing teams, India, Israel and Lebanon were the first non-European participants. In the end, the podium had the exact same configuration as in 1949, with the Soviet Union claiming their second gold, Czechoslovakia earning silver and Bulgaria taking bronze.
This and the next two World Championships were held in the same years as the Olympic Games. In 1956, at the first edition played indoors, the French capital Paris welcomed as many as 24 competing teams, including the first participants from the western hemisphere – Brazil, Cuba and USA. This time, Czechoslovakia won their first title, and were joined by Romania and USSR on the podium. Four years, later Brazil organised the first World Championship outside Europe and the first to be played in multiple host cities. The same teams made the podium, however in a different order – USSR, Czechoslovakia, Romania.
Once volleyball was approved as an Olympic sport and about to make its debut at the Tokyo 1964 Games, the four-year World Championship cycle was advanced by two years and the fifth edition took place in 1962, again in USSR, in four cities in the then-Soviet republics of Latvia, Russia and Ukraine. It produced the exact same podium as two years earlier. Tunisia’s participation in that tournament marked Africa’s World Championship debut.
Czechoslovakia took their second title when they hosted the event again in 1966. It was played in one Slovak and four Czech cities. Once again, Romania and USSR took the other two medals. For the first time the number of participating teams was restricted and some form of qualifiers were organised. However, with no qualified African teams actually arriving for the competition, it was the next edition in 1970 when all five continental confederations were simultaneously represented for the first time.
That year, East Germany celebrated their first world title. They made an incredible comeback from 13‑5 down in the tie-breaker against hosts Bulgaria in the deciding match for the gold medals in Sofia. GDR’s Rudi Schumann was the first athlete to be honoured as a World Championship MVP. Japan took the bronze and became the first non-European team to medal at the World Championships.
East Germany’s Rudi Schumann, the first MVP in the history of the World Championships, at Bulgaria 1970
Current reigning champions Poland claimed their first world title at Mexico 1974, accompanied by the Soviet Union and Japan on the podium. While until that point the various stages of the World Championships were played in round-robin formats, the first knockout rounds were introduced at Italy 1978, when the Soviets regained the crown by shutting out the hosts in the first-ever World Championship final. Cuba won the third place match to claim their first medal.
In 1982, USSR defended the title by sweeping Brazil in the final and hosts Argentina settled for bronze, the first World Championship medals for both South American nations. The United States of America were the first non-European team to top a World Championship podium. They did so after winning the France 1986 final against the Soviets, while Bulgaria took the bronze. The number of participating teams for that and the next two editions was limited to 16.
source : https://en.volleyballworld.com/volleyball/competitions/men-world-championship-2022/news/men-s-world-championship-to-celebrate-20th-edition
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