2018 in Review: Sitting volleyball

The 2018 Sitting Volleyball World Championships were the sport’s most important competition of the year, but they were not the only highlight.


Photo: The 2018  World Championships topped a superb year for Sitting Volleyball
Story courtesy of the IPC


Unstoppable Iran

Led by 2.46m tall Morteza Mehrzadselakjani, reigning Paralympic champions Iran continued with their worldwide dominance. They won the inaugural men’s Super 6 on home soil in the city of Tabriz following a 3-0 (25-21, 25-23, 28-26) victory over Russia* in the gold-medal match.

They followed that by claiming their seventh World Championships title after defeating Bosnia and Herzegovina 3-0 (25-18, 25-13, 25-20) in the final.

Mehrzadselakjani was named IPC Allianz Athlete of the Month for July after a superb performance in the Netherlands.

Iran followed that up with gold at the Asian Para Games in Jakarta, Indonesia.

Russia make history

Despite being the reigning women’s European champions, Russia were not the favourites for gold at the World Championships. World champions China and Rio 2016 gold medallists USA were the strongest on paper.

But they upset all odds and won their first Worlds title following a 3-1 victory (18-25, 27-25, 26-24, 26-24) over USA.

Royal approval

The IPC Honorary Member Royal Highness Princess Margriet paid a surprise visit to the World Championships and joined the many orange supporters in the Dutch women’s team 3-0 victory over Rwanda.

China win Women’s World Super 6

The Chinese women’s team won the competition which gathered six of the world’s best female teams: China, Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Russia and Ukraine.

On home soil in Chengdu, they beat Russia 3-2 (29-27, 25-12, 27-29, 18-25, 15-13) in a thrilling final.

China also topped the podium at the Asian Para Games.

World ParaVolley Foundation founded

World ParaVolley announced the formation of the World ParaVolley Foundation, a global organisation which aims to develop ParaVolley, positively impact the lives of people with impairment, contribute to equity for the disabled, build an inclusive society and inspire people with impairment to be role models in their community and become the leaders of tomorrow.