German Women's Volleyball Cup

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Women's Volleyball DVV-Pokal
SportVolleyball
Founded1973
First season1973
AdministratorDVV
CountryGermany
ContinentEurope
Most recent
champion(s)
Allianz MTV Stuttgart (4th title)
Most titlesUSC Münster (11 titles)
TV partner(s)Sport 1
Official websitewww.volleyball-bundesliga.de

The DVV-Pokal für Frauen is the national cup

women's volleyball . The organizer is the German Volleyball Association (DVV). The finals have been held in the SAP Arena in Mannheim since 2016. The current title holders in 2021 are the Schweriner SC.[1]

Competition history

Award ceremony at the 2015 cup final in the Gerry Weber Stadium

The DVV Cup has been held since 1973. Its East German counterpart was the FDGB Cup under the direction of the German Sports Association Volleyball of the GDR (DSVB), which was held between 1953 and 1991.

From 2006 to 2015 the finals took place in the

Gerry Weber Stadium in Halle.[2] In April 2015, the DVV announced that there was a new venue. Since February 28, 2016, the finals have been held in the SAP Arena in Mannheim.[3] In March 2018, the German Volleyball Association, the Volleyball Bundesliga and the operators of the SAP Arena agreed to extend the two-year contract by two more years until 2020.[4]
The contract, which expires in 2020, was again extended to at least 2025.

List of champions

Years Champions Score Runners-up
1973
USC Münster
1974
USC Münster
1975
USC Münster
1976
USC Münster
1977
1. VC Schwerte
1978
1. VC Schwerte
1979
USC Münster
1980
1. VC Schwerte
1981
TG 1862 Rüsselsheim
1982
SV Lohhof
1983
SV Lohhof
1984
SV Lohhof
1985
TG Viktoria Augsburg
1986
SV Lohhof
1987
SG/JDZ Feuerbach
1988
CJD Feuerbach
1989
CJD Feuerbach
1990
CJD Feuerbach
1991
USC Münster
1992
CJD Berlin
1993
CJD Berlin
1994
CJD Berlin
1995
CJD Berlin
1996
USC Münster
1997
USC Münster
1998
VEW Telnet Schwerte
1999
Dresdner SC
2000
USC Münster
2001
Schweriner SC
2002
Dresdner SC NA. Hamburg
2003
SSV Ulm Aliud Pharma USC Münster
2004
USC Münster 3 - 2
(17-25, 20–25, 25–14, 25–21, 15–8)
NA. Hamburg
2005
USC Münster 3 - 0
(25-19, 25–23, 25–19)
Bayer 04 Leverkusen
2006
Schweriner SC 3 - 0
(25-19, 26–24, 25–23)
USC Münster
2007
Schweriner SC 3 - 1
(25-17, 25–21, 17–25, 25–17)
Dresdner SC
2008
VfB Suhl 3 - 1
(25-20, 25–22, 23–25, 25–19)
NA. Hamburg
2009
Rote Raben Vilsbiburg 3 - 2
(25-22, 25–23, 16–25, 18–25, 15–12)
Dresdner SC
2010
Dresdner SC 3 - 1
(29-27, 16–25, 25–22, 25–19)
VfB Suhl
2011
Smart Allianz Stuttgart
3 - 0
(25-21, 28–26, 25–20)
VfB Suhl
2012
Schweriner SC 3 - 1
(25-21, 25–15, 23–25, 27–25)
Rote Raben Vilsbiburg
2013
Schweriner SC 3 - 0
(25-20, 25–20, 25–17)
1. VC Wiesbaden
2014
Rote Raben Vilsbiburg 3 - 0
(25-22, 25–22, 25–20)
VolleyStars Thüringen
2015
Allianz MTV Stuttgart 3 - 2
(17-25, 20–25, 25–19, 25–19, 15–13)
Ladies in Black Aachen
2016
Dresdner SC 3 - 2
(25-22, 20–25, 25–18, 17–25, 15–10)
Allianz MTV Stuttgart
2017
Allianz MTV Stuttgart 3 - 2
(22-25, 21–25, 25–23, 25–15, 15–12)
Schweriner SC
2018
Dresdner SC 3 - 0
(25-21, 25–22, 25–18)
1. VC Wiesbaden
2019[5]
SSC Palmberg Schwerin 3 - 0
(25-21, 25–21, 25–20)
Allianz MTV Stuttgart
2020
Dresdner SC 3 - 2
(25-19, 20–25, 21–25, 28–26, 17–15)
Allianz MTV Stuttgart
2021
SSC Palmberg Schwerin 3 - 0
(25-19, 25–13, 25–18)
SC Potsdam
2022
Allianz MTV Stuttgart 3 - 0
(25-17, 25-15, 25-15)
Dresdner SC

Honours by club

Rk. Club Titles City Years won
1 USC Münster 11 Münster 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1991, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
2 Schweriner SC 7 Schwerin 2001, 2006, 2007, 2012, 2013, 2019, 2021
3 Dresdner SC 6 Dresden 1999, 2002, 2010, 2016, 2018, 2020
4 1. VC Schwerte 4 Schwerte 1977, 1978, 1980, 1998
= SV Lohhof 4 Unterschleißheim 1982, 1983, 1984, 1986
=
CJD Feuerbach
4
Feuerbach
1987, 1988, 1989, 1990
= CJD Berlin 4 Berlin 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995
= Allianz MTV Stuttgart 4 Stuttgart 2011, 2015, 2017, 2022
9 Rote Raben Vilsbiburg 2 Vilsbiburg 2009, 2014
10 TG 1862 Rüsselsheim 1
Rüsselsheim
1981
= TG Viktoria Augsburg 1
Augsbourg
1985
= SSV Ulm Aliud Pharma 1 Ulm 2003
= VfB Suhl 1 Suhl 2008

References

  1. ^ "Volleyball-Bundesliga Official Webpage" (in German). Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  2. ^ OWL Journal (2015-04-09). "DVV-Pokalfinale: Rückblick auf großartige Zeiten im GERRY WEBER STADION". Retrieved 2020-10-02.
  3. ^ Deutscher Volleyball-Verband (2015-04-13). "DVV-Pokalfinale: Am 28. Februar 2016 in Mannheim". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-04-13.
  4. ^ stadionwelt.de: Pokalfinale bleibt in der SAP Arena Retrieved 6 March 2018
  5. ^ ndr.de. "SSC aus Schwerin ist Volleyball-Pokalsieger". Retrieved 10 February 2022.

External links