sitting volleyball

{{Short description|Variant of volleyball where the players sit on the floor}}

{{Infobox sport

|name = Sitting Volleyball

|image = London 2012 paralympic volleyball (1).jpg

|imagesize = 200

|caption =

|union =

  1. ISMGF (1956–1981) No organ
  2. ISOD (1981–1992)
  3. ISOD (1992–1994) Separate
  4. WOVD (1994–2014)
  5. WPV (2014-present)

|mgender = No

|category = Indoor

|paralympic = 1976–1980

}}

Sitting volleyball is a form of volleyball for athletes with a disability organized by World ParaVolley. As opposed to standing volleyball, sitting volleyball players must sit on the floor to play.

History

Sitting volleyball was invented in the Netherlands by the Dutch Sport Committee in 1956 as a rehabilitation sport for injured soldiers. "Sitting Volleyball." Tokyo 1500. https://tokyo2020.org/en/games/sport/paralympic/sitting-volleyball/. {{Cite web|title=ParaVolley & Deaf Volleyball|url=http://www.volleyballaustralia.org.au/page/paravolley|access-date=2020-10-15|website=www.volleyballaustralia.org.au|archive-date=2020-10-17|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201017222833/http://www.volleyballaustralia.org.au/page/paravolley|url-status=dead}}

In 1958, the first international sitting volleyball contact was held between Germany and Dutch clubteams.“Sitting Volleyball: Paralympic Classification Interactive.” Team USA, United States Olympic Committee, 2019, www.teamusa.org/US-Paralympics/athlete-classifications/standing-volleyball/.

It was created as a combination of volleyball and sitzball, a German sport with no net and seated players. Sitting volleyball first appeared in the 1976 Summer Paralympics as a demonstration sport for athletes with impaired mobility, and both standing and sitting volleyball became officially included as medal sports in the 1980 Summer Paralympics. Women's sitting volleyball was added for the 2004 Summer Paralympics."Sport Week: History of Sitting Volleyball." Official Website of the Paralympic Movement, 2016. https://www.paralympic.org/news/sport-week-history-sitting-volleyball/.

After the London 2012 games, VolleySLIDE was founded by Matt Rogers to promote and develop the sport globally."VolleySlide Founder and Leader. World ParaVolley VolleySLIDE. http://www.volleyslide.net/founder-leader/4583509203/ {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211027045730/http://www.volleyslide.net/founder-leader/4583509203/ |date=2021-10-27 }}. Eight men's and eight women's teams competed in the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games.

Rules

File:US Navy 110517-N-CD297-109 Members from Team Navy-Coast Guard volley against members of the U.S. Army sitting volleyball team during a preliminary.jpg

{{see also|Sitting volleyball classification}}

In sitting volleyball, a {{convert|7|m||adj=mid|-long}}, {{convert|0.8|m||adj=mid|-wide}} net is set at {{Convert|1.15|m|ft|abbr=off}} high for men and {{Convert|1.05|m|ft|abbr=off}} high for women. The court is {{Convert|10 x 6|m|ft|abbr=off}} meters with a 2-metre (6.6-foot) attack line. The rules are the same as the original form of volleyball with the exceptions that players must have at least one buttock in contact with the floor whenever they make contact with the ball and it is also possible to block the serve.{{cite book|last=Ng|first=Kwok|title=When Sitting is Not Resting: Sitting Volleyball|year=2012|publisher=Authorhouse|location=Bloomington, IL|isbn=978-1-4772-1789-4|pages=152|url=http://www.authorhouse.co.uk/Bookstore/BookDetail.aspx?BookId=SKU-000565946}}{{self-published inline|certain=y|date=January 2019}}

Athletes with the following disabilities are eligible to compete in sitting volleyball: athletes with amputations, spinal cord injuries, cerebral palsy, brain injuries and stroke. Classifications of these athletes by disability are placed into two categories: VS1 and VS2 formerly D and MD. While VS2 athletes have lost only a fraction of their muscular strength and flexibility in a joint preventing them from successfully playing standing volleyball, VS1 athletes have lost all of their muscular strength and flexibility in that joint.

Only two VS2 players are allowed on the court at a time; this is to keep the competition fair between rival teams. The rest of the team must be classified as VS1 players.“Sitting Volleyball.” UCO, sites.uco.edu/wellness/sr/trainingsite/tssitvolleyball.asp.

= Skills =

Skills are largely identical to the sport of volleyball and the following game terminology apply:

  • Ace – A serve that lands in the opponent's court without being touched.
  • Attack – An attempt by a player to win a point by hitting the ball over the net.
  • Attack line – In indoor volleyball, a line three metres from the net which marks the limit for where a back-row player may advance to hit a ball from above the net.
  • Back-row player – In indoor volleyball, any of three players positioned at the back of the court.
  • Block – To block an opposing player from spiking the ball by jumping at the net with arms in the air.
  • Boom – In beach volleyball, a spike straight down into the sand (slang).
  • Centre line – In indoor volleyball, the imaginary line running directly under the net and dividing the court in half.
  • Chuck – To push or throw the ball rather than hit it (slang).
  • Court – The playing area.
  • Crossing space – The zone above the net and between two antennae through which the ball must pass during a rally.
  • Dig – A defensive move in which both arms are placed together in an attempt to bounce a hard-hit ball up into the air.
  • End line – A back boundary line of the court.
  • Facial – A boom or spike that hits an opponent in the face (slang).
  • Fault – A foul or error which results in the loss of the rally.
  • Front-row player – In indoor volleyball, any of three players positioned closest to the net.
  • Front zone – In indoor volleyball, the area between the net and the attack line.
  • Ground – To hit the ball to the ground, preferably on the other team's court.
  • Heater – A hard-hit or spiked ball (slang).
  • Hit – To touch the ball as an offensive player, one of three "hits" allowed a team in getting the ball back over the net.
  • Hold – To let the ball settle into the hands briefly on a shot instead of releasing it immediately.
  • Joust – A joust occurs above the net between two or more opposing players that forces the ball to become stationary. Point is replayed.
  • Kill – To smash the ball overarm into the opponent's court; also called a "spike".
  • Kong – A one-handed block, named after King Kong's style of swatting biplanes in the original King Kong movie (slang).
  • Libero – In indoor volleyball, a substitute defensive player especially adept at digging.
  • Lip – A good dig (slang
  • Match – A series of sets to determine a winner.
  • Mintonette – The original name for volleyball.
  • Missile – A spike or serve hit out of bounds (slang).
  • Pass – the attempt by a team to properly handle the opponent's serve, or any form of attack.
  • Rally – The exchange of plays that decides each point.
  • Rotate – In indoor volleyball, to move to the next position on the floor in a clockwise manner.
  • Screen – To impede the opponent's view of the ball during the serve.
  • Serve – The stroke used to put the ball in play at the start of each rally.
  • Set – 1. The part of a match completed when one side has scored enough points to win a single contest. 2. To position the ball so a teammate can attack.
  • Setter – A player who excels in setting up teammates to attack.
  • Sideline – A side boundary line on a court.
  • Spade – An ace (slang).
  • Spike – To smash the ball overarm into the opponent's court; also called a "kill".
  • Windmill Spike (hand movement during Spike follows motion of windmill).

Members

{{main|World ParaVolley}}{{cleanup inline|date=September 2024}}

List also includes former members (national teams that took part in previous major tournaments).

; List of sitting volleyball national teams{{Cite web|url=http://www.worldparavolley.org/sitting-volleyball-rankings/|title=Sitting Volleyball Rankings > World ParaVolley}}

{{div col|colwidth=18em}}

  • {{flagcountry|Algeria}}
  • {{flagcountry|Argentina}}
  • {{flagcountry|Australia}}
  • {{flagcountry|Austria}}
  • {{flagcountry|Azerbaijan}}
  • {{flagcountry|Bosnia and Herzegovina}}
  • {{flagcountry|Burundi}}
  • {{flagcountry|Brazil}}
  • {{flagcountry|Canada}}
  • {{flagcountry|Cambodia}}
  • {{flagcountry|China}}
  • {{flagcountry|Colombia}}
  • {{flagcountry|Costa Rica}}
  • {{flagcountry|Croatia}}
  • {{flagcountry|Cuba}}
  • {{flagcountry|Czech Republic}}
  • {{flagcountry|DR Congo}}
  • {{flagcountry|Egypt}}
  • {{flagcountry|Great Britain}}
  • {{flagcountry|France}}
  • {{flagcountry|Finland}}
  • {{flagcountry|Germany}}
  • {{flagcountry|Greece}}
  • {{flagcountry|Hungary}}
  • {{flagcountry|Iran}}
  • {{flagcountry|Iraq}}
  • {{flagcountry|Italy}}
  • {{flagcountry|Japan}}
  • {{flagcountry|Kazakhstan}}
  • {{flagcountry|Kenya}}
  • {{flagcountry|Libya}}
  • {{flagcountry|Latvia}}
  • {{flagcountry|Lithuania}}
  • {{flagcountry|Luxembourg}}
  • {{flagcountry|Malta}}
  • {{flagcountry|Mexico}}
  • {{flagcountry|Mongolia}}
  • {{flagcountry|Morocco}}
  • {{flagcountry|Myanmar}}
  • {{flagcountry|Netherlands}}
  • {{flagcountry|Norway}}
  • {{flagcountry|Philippines}}
  • {{flagcountry|Poland}}
  • {{flagcountry|Russia}}
  • {{flagcountry|Rwanda}}
  • {{flagcountry|Serbia}}
  • {{flagcountry|Slovenia}}
  • {{flagcountry|South Africa}}
  • {{flagcountry|Sri Lanka}}
  • {{flagcountry|Sweden}}
  • {{flagcountry|South Korea}}
  • {{flagcountry|United States}}
  • {{flagcountry|Ukraine}}

Defunct national teams

  • {{flagcountry|Czechoslovakia}}
  • {{flagcountry|West Germany}}
  • {{flagcountry|Yugoslavia}}

{{div col end}}

Championships

=Paralympics=

{{See also|Volleyball at the Summer Paralympics}}

Sitting volleyball was first demonstrated at the Summer Paralympic Games in 1976 and was introduced as a full Paralympic event in 1980. The 2000 games was the last time standing volleyball appeared on the Paralympic programme. The women's sitting volleyball event introduction followed in the 2004 Paralympic Games.

World ParaVolley (formerly WOVD) World Championships

{{Main|World Para Volleyball Championship}}

=Sitting=

==Men's Sitting – past winners==

{{MedalistTable|type=Year|location=yes}}
style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 1983

| Delden

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

| {{Flag icon|Finland}} Finland

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Norway}} 1985

| Kristiansand

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Yugoslavia}} Yugoslavia

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Hungary}} 1986

| Pécs

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Hungary}} Hungary

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|USA}} 1989

| Las Vegas

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|Hungary}} Hungary

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 1990

| Assen

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|Yugoslavia}} Yugoslavia

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Germany}} 1994

| Bottrop

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Norway}} Norway

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Iran}} 1998

| Tehran

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Finland}} Finland

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Egypt}} 2002

| Cairo

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 2006

| Roermond

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Egypt}} Egypt

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|USA}} 2010

| Edmond

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Egypt}} Egypt

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Poland}} 2014

| Elblag

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Brazil}} Brazil

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 2018

| The Hague

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Ukraine}} Ukraine

style="text-align: center;" | {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} 2022

| Sarajevo

| {{Flag icon|Iran}} Iran

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Brazil}} Brazil

style="text-align: center;" | {{Flag icon|China}} 2026

| Hangzhou

| {{Flag icon

}

| {{Flag icon|}}

| {{Flag icon|}}

|}

= Ranking =

{{Medals table

| caption =

| host =

| flag_template = flagcountry

| event =

| team =

| gold_IRI = 8 | silver_IRI = 1 | bronze_IRI = 2

| gold_BIH = 3 | silver_BIH = 3 | bronze_BIH = 1

| gold_NED = 2 | silver_NED = 1 | bronze_NED = 3

| gold_GER = 0 | silver_GER = 2 | bronze_GER = 1

| gold_FIN = 0 | silver_FIN = 1 | bronze_FIN = 1

| gold_YUG = 0 | silver_YUG = 1 | bronze_YUG = 1

| gold_HUN = 0 | silver_HUN = 2 | bronze_HUN = 0

| gold_BRA = 0 | silver_BRA = 1 | bronze_BRA = 1

| gold_NOR = 0 | silver_NOR = 1 | bronze_NOR = 0

| gold_EGY = 0 | silver_EGY = 0 | bronze_EGY = 2

| gold_UKR = 0 | silver_UKR = 0 | bronze_UKR = 1

}}

==Women's Sitting – past winners==

{{MedalistTable|type=Year|location=yes}}
style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Germany}} 1994

| Bottrop

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|Latvia}} Latvia

| {{Flag icon|Lithuania}} Lithuania

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 2000

| Maastricht

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|Finland}} Finland

| {{Flag icon|Slovenia}} Slovenia

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Slovenia}} 2002

| Kamnik

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|Slovenia}} Slovenia

| {{Flag icon|Finland}} Finland

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 2006

| Roermond

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|China}} China

| {{Flag icon|Slovenia}} Slovenia

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|USA}} 2010

| Edmond

| {{Flag icon|China}} China

| {{Flag icon|United States}} United States

| {{Flag icon|Ukraine}} Ukraine

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Poland}} 2014

| Elblag

| {{Flag icon|China}} China

| {{Flag icon|United States}} United States

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 2018

| Rotterdam

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

| {{Flag icon|United States}} United States

| {{Flag icon|China}} China

style="text-align: center;" | {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} 2022

| Sarajevo

| {{Flag icon|Brazil}} Brazil

| {{Flag icon|Canada}} Canada

| {{Flag icon|United States}} United States

style="text-align: center;" | {{Flag icon|China}} 2026

| Hangzhou

| {{Flag icon

}

| {{Flag icon|}}

| {{Flag icon|}}

|}

= Ranking =

{{Medals table

| caption =

| host =

| flag_template = flagcountry

| event =

| team =

| gold_NED = 4 | silver_NED = 0 | bronze_NED = 0

| gold_CHN = 2 | silver_CHN = 1 | bronze_CHN = 1

| gold_RUS = 1 | silver_RUS = 0 | bronze_RUS = 1

| gold_BRA = 1 | silver_BRA = 0 | bronze_BRA = 0

| gold_USA = 0 | silver_USA = 3 | bronze_USA = 1

| gold_SLO = 0 | silver_SLO = 1 | bronze_SLO = 2

| gold_FIN = 0 | silver_FIN = 1 | bronze_FIN = 1

| gold_CAN = 0 | silver_CAN = 1 | bronze_CAN = 0

| gold_LAT = 0 | silver_LAT = 1 | bronze_LAT = 0

| gold_LTU = 0 | silver_LTU = 0 | bronze_LTU = 1

| gold_UKR = 0 | silver_UKR = 0 | bronze_UKR = 1

}}

=Standing=

=Beach=

ParaVolley Europe (formerly ECVD) European Championships

Euro Federation

https://paravolley.eu/

https://paravolley.eu/competitions

https://paravolley.eu/competitions/history/roll-of-honour

NATIONS LEAGUE 2024

=Men's Sitting – past winners=

{{cite web|url=http://www.sittingvolleyball.info/book/major-competitions|work=www.sittingvolleyball.info|author=Kwok Ng|title=Major Competitions|date=26 September 2016|access-date=26 September 2016}}{{Cite web| title=Sitting Volleyball European Championships | date=2024-05-13 | url=https://api.website.paravolley.eu/storage/files/9c087bc9-1a35-4393-bf7d-f80e8357f61e.pdf | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240530204413/https://api.website.paravolley.eu/storage/files/9c087bc9-1a35-4393-bf7d-f80e8357f61e.pdf | archive-date=2024-05-30}}{{cite web | url=https://paravolley.eu/competitions/history/roll-of-honour | title=Roll of Honour }}{{cite web | url=https://paravolley.eu/competitions/history/previous-years | title=Previous Years }}

{{cleanup |table|pl=y|reason=thetable is duplicated, and one copy has some information the other one has not and vice versa|date=September 2024}}

class=wikitable

|+ Winners of European Championships of sitting volleyball ({{as of|2024|05|13|lc=y}})

EditionYearCityGold medalSilver medalBronze medal
I1981BonnNEDFRGSWE
II1983DeltenNEDFRGFIN
III1985KristiansandNEDYUGSWE
IV1987SarajevoNEDYUGNOR
V1991NottinghamNEDHUNNOR
VI1993JärvenpääNORFINHUN
VII1995LjubljanaHUNNORNED
VIII1997TallinnFINNORBIH
IX1999SarajevoBIHGERFIN
X2001SárospatakBIHGERNED
XI2003LappeenrantaBIHGERFIN
XII2005LeverkusenBIHGERRUS
XIII2007NyíregyházaBIHRUSGER
XIV2009ElblągBIHRUSGER
XV2011RotterdamBIHRUSGER
XVI2013ElblągBIHRUSGER
XVII2015WarendorfBIHGERRUS
XVIII2017PorečRUSUKRBIH
XIX2019BudapestRUSBIHGER
XX2021KemerBIHRUSGER
XXI2023CaorleBIHGERUKR

{{MedalistTable|type=Year|location=yes}}
style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Germany}} 1981

| Bonn

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Sweden

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 1983

| Delden

| {{NED}}

| {{FRG}}

| {{FIN}}

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Norway}} 1985

| Kristiansand

| {{NED}}

| {{YUG}}

| {{SWE}}

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Yugoslavia}} 1987

| Sarajevo

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{Flag icon|Yugoslavia}} Yugoslavia

| {{NOR}}

style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon
} 1989 Not Held

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Great Britain}} 1991

| Nottingham

| {{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Netherlands

| {{HUN}}

| {{NOR}}

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Finland}} 1993

| Järvenpää

| {{Flag icon|Norway}} Norway

| {{Flag icon|Finland}} Finland

| {{HUN}}

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Slovenia}} 1995

| Ljubljana

| {{Flag icon|Hungary}} Hungary

| {{NOR}}

| {{NED}}

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Estonia}} 1997

| Tallinn

| {{Flag icon|Finland}} Finland

| {{NOR}}

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} 1999

| Sarajevo

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

| {{Flag icon|Finland}} Finland

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Hungary}} 2001

| Sárospatak

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

| {{NED}}

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Finland}} 2003

| Lappeenranta

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

| {{Flag icon|Finland}} Finland

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Germany}} 2005

| Leverkusen

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Hungary}} 2007

| Nyíregyháza

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Poland}} 2009

| Elbląg

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Netherlands}} 2011

| Rotterdam

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Poland}} 2013

| Elbląg

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Germany}} 2015

| Warendorf

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Croatia}} 2017

| Poreč

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

| {{Flag icon|Ukraine}} Ukraine

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Hungary}} 2019

| Budapest

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Turkey}} 2021

| Antalya

| {{Flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flag icon|Russia}} Russia

| {{Flag icon|Germany}} Germany

|-

| style="text-align: center;" |{{flagicon|Italy}} 2023

| Caorle

| {{Flagicon|BIH}} Bosnia and Herzegovina

| {{Flagicon|GER}} Germany

| {{Flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

|}

=Women's Sitting – past winners=

{{MedalistTable|type=Year|location=yes}}
1993

|{{flagicon|FIN}} Järvenpää

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

|{{flagicon|FIN}} Finland

|{{flagicon|EST}} Estonia

1995

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Ljubljana

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

|{{flagicon|LAT}} Latvia

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

1997

|{{flagicon|EST}} Tallinn

|{{flagicon|LAT}} Latvia

|{{flagicon|LTU}} Lithuania

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

1999

|{{flagicon|BIH}} Sarajevo

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

|{{flagicon|FIN}} Finland

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

2001

|{{flagicon|HUN}} Sárospatak

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

|{{flagicon|FIN}} Finland

2003

|{{flagicon|FIN}} Lappeenranta

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

|{{flagicon|FIN}} Finland

2005

|{{flagicon|GER}} Leverkusen

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

|{{flagicon|LTU}} Lithuania

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

2007

|{{flagicon|HUN}} Nyíregyháza

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

|{{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

2009

|{{flagicon|POL}} Elbląg

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

|{{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

2011

|{{flagicon|NED}} Rotterdam

|{{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

|{{flagicon|RUS}} Russia

2013

|{{flagicon|POL}} Elbląg

|{{flagicon|RUS}} Russia

|{{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

2015

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Podčetrtek

|{{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

|{{flagicon|RUS}} Russia

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

2017

|{{flagicon|CRO}} Poreč

|{{flagicon|RUS}} Russia

|{{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

|{{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands

2019

|{{flagicon|HUN}} Budapest

|{{flagicon|RUS}} Russia

|{{flagicon|ITA}} Italy

|{{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

2021

|{{flagicon|TUR}} Antalya

|{{flagicon|RUS}} Russia

|{{flagicon|ITA}} Italy

|{{flagicon|GER}} Germany

2023

|{{flagicon|ITA}} Caorle

|{{flagicon|ITA}} Italy

|{{flagicon|SLO}} Slovenia

|{{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine

=Men (1981–2023)=

{{Medals table

| caption =

| host =

| flag_template = flagcountry

| event =

| team =

| gold_BIH = 11| silver_BIH = 1 | bronze_BIH = 2

| gold_NED = 5 | silver_NED = 0 | bronze_NED = 2

| gold_RUS = 2 | silver_RUS = 5 | bronze_RUS = 2

| gold_NOR = 1 | silver_NOR = 2 | bronze_NOR = 2

| gold_FIN = 1 | silver_FIN = 1 | bronze_FIN = 3

| gold_HUN = 1 | silver_HUN = 1 | bronze_HUN = 1

| gold_GER = 0 | silver_GER = 8 | bronze_GER = 6

| gold_YUG = 0 | silver_YUG = 2 | bronze_YUG = 0

| gold_UKR = 0 | silver_UKR = 1 | bronze_UKR = 1

| gold_SWE = 0 | silver_SWE = 0 | bronze_SWE = 2

}}

=Women (1993–2023)=

{{Medals table

| caption =

| host =

| flag_template = flagcountry

| event =

| team =

| gold_NED = 7 | silver_NED = 1 | bronze_NED = 3

| gold_RUS = 4 | silver_RUS = 1 | bronze_RUS = 1

| gold_UKR = 2 | silver_UKR = 4 | bronze_UKR = 2

| gold_SLO = 1 | silver_SLO = 3 | bronze_SLO = 6

| gold_ITA = 1 | silver_ITA = 2 | bronze_ITA = 0

| gold_LAT = 1 | silver_LAT = 1 | bronze_LAT = 0

| gold_LTU = 0 | silver_LTU = 2 | bronze_LTU = 0

| gold_FIN = 0 | silver_FIN = 2 | bronze_FIN = 2

| gold_EST = 0 | silver_EST = 0 | bronze_EST = 1

| gold_GER = 0 | silver_GER = 0 | bronze_GER = 1

}}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}