Russia women's national volleyball team

Russia
AssociationVolleyball Federation of Russia
ConfederationCEV
Head coachvacant
FIVB rankingNR (as of 8 January 2025)
Uniforms
Home
Away
Summer Olympics
Appearances14 (First in 1964)
Best result (1968 (USSR)), (1972 (USSR)), (1980 (USSR)), (1988 (USSR))
World Championship
Appearances17 (First in 1952)
Best result (1952 (USSR), 1956 (USSR), 1960 (USSR), 1970 (USSR), 1990 (USSR), 2006 & 2010)
World Cup
Appearances8 (First in 1973)
Best result (1973 (USSR))
European Championship
Appearances30 (First in 1949)
Best result (1949 (USSR), 1950 (USSR), 1951 (USSR), 1958 (USSR), 1963 (USSR), 1967 (USSR), 1971 (USSR), 1975 (USSR), 1977 (USSR), 1979 (USSR), 1985 (USSR), 1989 (USSR), 1991 (USSR), 1993, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2013, 2015)
www.volley.ru (in Russian)
Honours
Olympic Games
1968 Mexico City Team (URS)
1972 Munich Team (URS)
1980 Moscow Team (URS)
1988 Seoul Team (URS)
1964 Tokyo Team (URS)
1976 Montreal Team (URS)
1992 Barcelona Team (EUN)
2000 Sydney Team
2004 Athens Team
FIVB World Championship
1952 Soviet Union URS
1956 France URS
1960 Brazil URS
1970 Bulgaria URS
1990 China URS
2006 Japan
2010 Japan
1962 Soviet Union URS
1974 Mexico URS
1978 Soviet Union URS
1994 Brazil
1998 Japan
2002 Germany
FIVB World Cup
1973 Uruguay (URS)
1989 Japan (URS)
1999 Japan
1981 Japan (URS)
1985 Japan (URS)
1991 Japan (URS)
2019 Japan (RUS)
World Grand Champions Cup
1997 Japan
2001 Japan
1993 Japan
FIVB World Grand Prix
1997 Kobe
1999 Yu Xi
2002 Hong Kong
1998 Hong Kong
2000 Manila
2003 Andria
2006 Reggio Calabria
2009 Tokyo
2015 Omaha
1993 Hong Kong
1996 Shanghai
2001 Macau
2014 Tokyo
European Championship
1949 Czechoslovakia (URS)
1950 Bulgaria (URS)
1951 France (URS)
1958 Czechoslovakia (URS)
1963 Romania (URS)
1967 Turkey (URS)
1971 Italy (URS)
1975 Yugoslavia (URS)
1977 Finland (URS)
1979 France (URS)
1985 Netherlands (URS)
1989 West Germany (URS)
1991 Italy (URS)
1993 Czech Republic
1997 Czech Republic
1999 Italy
2001 Bulgaria
2013 Germany/Switzerland
2015 Netherlands
1955 Romania (URS)
1981 Bulgaria (URS)
1983 East Germany (URS)
1987 Belgium (URS)
1995 Netherlands
2005 Croatia
2007 Belgium/Luxembourg
Summer Universiade
1997 Catania
2013 Kazan
2015 Gwangju
2017 Taipei
2019 Naples
1999 Majorca
2001 Beijing
1995 Fukuoka
2003 Daegu
2011 Shenzhen

The Russia women's national volleyball team is governed by the Russian Volleyball Federation and participated in international volleyball competitions. They played from 1949 to 1991 as the Soviet Union and as the CIS in 1992.

In response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the International Volleyball Federation suspended all Russian national teams, clubs, and officials, as well as beach and snow volleyball athletes, from all events.[1][2] The European Volleyball Confederation (CEV) also banned all Russian national teams, clubs, and officials from participating in European competition, and suspended all members of Russia from their respective functions in CEV organs.[3]

Major world titles

USSR

Year Games Host Runners-up 3rd place
1952 1st World Championship Soviet Union  Poland  Czechoslovakia
1956 2nd World Championship France  Romania  Poland
1960 3rd World Championship Brazil  Japan  Czechoslovakia
1968# 19th Olympic Games Mexico  Japan  Poland
1970# 6th World Championship Bulgaria  Japan  North Korea
1972# 20th Olympic Games West Germany  Japan  North Korea
1973# 1st World Cup Uruguay  Japan  South Korea
1980 22nd Olympic Games Soviet Union  East Germany  Bulgaria
1988 24th Olympic Games South Korea  Peru  China
1990 11th World Championship China  China  United States

# – 4 major titles in row in late 1960s - early 1970s (World Women's Volleyball Championship, World Cup, Olympic Games)

Russia

Year Games Host Runners-up 3rd place
2006 15th World Championship Japan  Brazil  Serbia
2010 16th World Championship Japan  Brazil  Japan

Results

Olympic Games

Soviet Union
  • 1964 Silver medal
  • 1968 Gold medal
  • 1972 Gold medal
  • 1976 Silver medal
  • 1980 Gold medal
  • 1988 Gold medal
Unified Team
  • 1992 Silver medal
Russia
ROC

FIVB World Championship

Soviet Union
  • 1952 Gold medal
  • 1956 Gold medal
  • 1960 Gold medal
  • 1962 Silver medal
  • 1970 Gold medal
  • 1974 Silver medal
  • 1978 Bronze medal
  • 1982 – 6th place
  • 1986 – 6th place
  • 1990 Gold medal
Russia
  • 1994 Bronze medal
  • 1998 Bronze medal
  • 2002 Bronze medal
  • 2006 Gold medal
  • 2010 Gold medal
  • 2014 – 6th place
  • 2018 – 8th place
  • 2022 – Banned by FIVB

FIVB Volleyball World Grand Champions Cup

  • 1993 Bronze medal
  • 1997 Gold medal
  • 2001 Silver medal
  • 2013 – 4th place
  • 2017 – 4th place

FIVB World Cup

Soviet Union
  • 1973 Gold medal
  • 1977 – 7th place (tied)
  • 1981 Bronze medal
  • 1985 Bronze medal
  • 1989 Silver medal
  • 1991 Bronze medal
Russia
  • 1999 Silver medal
  • 2015 – 4th place
  • 2019 Bronze medal

FIVB World Grand Prix

Russia
  • 1993 Bronze medal
  • 1994 – 7th place
  • 1995 – 6th place
  • 1996 Bronze medal
  • 1997 Gold medal
  • 1998 Silver medal
  • 1999 Gold medal
  • 2000 Silver medal
  • 2001 Bronze medal
  • 2002 Gold medal
  • 2003 Silver medal
  • 2004 – 7th place
  • 2006 Silver medal
  • 2007 – 4th place
  • 2009 Silver medal
  • 2011 – 4th place
  • 2013 – 7th place
  • 2014 Bronze medal
  • 2015 Silver medal
  • 2016 – 4th place
  • 2017 – 9th place

FIVB Nations League

Russia
  • 2018 – 7th place
  • 2019 – 14th place
  • 2021 – 8th place
  • 2022 – Banned by FIVB
  • 2023 – Banned by FIVB
  • 2024 – Banned by FIVB
  • 2025 – Banned by FIVB

European Championship

Soviet Union
  • 1949 Gold medal
  • 1950 Gold medal
  • 1951 Gold medal
  • 1955 Silver medal
  • 1958 Gold medal
  • 1963 Gold medal
  • 1967 Gold medal
  • 1971 Gold medal
  • 1975 Gold medal
  • 1977 Gold medal
  • 1979 Gold medal
  • 1981 Silver medal
  • 1983 Silver medal
  • 1985 Gold medal
  • 1987 Silver medal
  • 1989 Gold medal
  • 1991 Gold medal
Russia

Current squad

The following is the Russian roster in the 2019 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup.[4]

Head coach: Sergio Busato

No. Name Date of birth Height Weight Spike Block 2019 club
1 Angelina Lazarenko 23 April 1998 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) 80 kg (180 lb) 320 cm (130 in) 305 cm (120 in) Volero Le Cannet
3 Ekaterina Efimova 3 July 1993 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) 70 kg (150 lb) 305 cm (120 in) 295 cm (116 in) Dynamo Moscow
4 Daria Chikrizova 9 June 1990 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in) 69 kg (152 lb) 185 cm (73 in) 180 cm (71 in) Dinamo-Metar Chelyabinsk
6 Irina Zaryazhko 4 October 1991 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) 78 kg (172 lb) 305 cm (120 in) 290 cm (110 in) Dynamo Kazan
7 Tatiana Romanova 9 September 1994 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) 64 kg (141 lb) 292 cm (115 in) 285 cm (112 in) Uralochka-NTMK
8 Nataliya Goncharova 1 June 1989 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) 75 kg (165 lb) 315 cm (124 in) 306 cm (120 in) Dynamo Moscow
9 Alla Galkina 15 April 1992 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) 65 kg (143 lb) 295 cm (116 in) 290 cm (110 in) Lokomotiv Kaliningrad
11 Margarita Kurilo 21 June 1993 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) 73 kg (161 lb) 304 cm (120 in) 290 cm (110 in) Yenisey Krasnoyarsk
13 Yevgeniya Startseva (c) 12 February 1989 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in) 68 kg (150 lb) 294 cm (116 in) 290 cm (110 in) Dynamo Kazan
16 Irina Voronkova 20 October 1995 1.94 m (6 ft 4 in) 84 kg (185 lb) 305 cm (120 in) 290 cm (110 in) Lokomotiv Kaliningrad
18 Ksenia Parubets 31 October 1994 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) 64 kg (141 lb) 300 cm (120 in) 286 cm (113 in) Uralochka-NTMK
19 Maria Khaletskaia 31 July 1994 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in) 80 kg (180 lb) 311 cm (122 in) 302 cm (119 in) Dinamo Krasnodar
25 Yulia Brovkina 31 May 2001 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) 70 kg (150 lb) 305 cm (120 in) 297 cm (117 in) Lokomotiv Kaliningrad
26 Anna Lazareva 31 January 1997 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) 67 kg (148 lb) 315 cm (124 in) 300 cm (120 in) Dynamo Moscow

References

  1. ^ "These are the sports that Russia has been suspended from". CNN.
  2. ^ "A glance at reaction of sports to Russian invasion". Associated Press. 3 March 2022.
  3. ^ "European Volleyball Federation bans Russian, Belarusian teams, officials from European competition".
  4. ^ "Team Roster – Russia". FIVB. 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2019.