2005 Beach Volleyball World Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

These page shows the results of the Beach Volleyball World Championships, held 21–26 June 2005 in Berlin, Germany. It was the fifth official edition of this event, after ten unofficial championships (1987–1996) all held in Rio de Janeiro.

Men's competition[]

Final ranking[]

Rank Athletes Seed
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Márcio Araújo and Fábio Luiz Magalhães (BRA) 2
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Sascha Heyer and Paul Laciga (SUI) 8
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Julius Brink and Kjell Schneider (GER) 13
4.   and  (GER) 43
5.  Kristjan Kais and Rivo Vesik (EST) 17
 Francisco Alvarez and  (CUB) 31
7.  Martin Conde and  (ARG) 10
 Phil Dalhausser and Todd Rogers (USA) 26
9.  Benjamin Insfran and Harley Marques (BRA) 4
 Markus Dieckmann and Jonas Reckermann (GER) 5
  and Dmitri Barsouk (RUS) 14
 Conrad Leinemann and  (CAN) 28
13.  Franco Neto and Tande Ramos (BRA) 3
 Christoph Dieckmann and Andreas Scheuerpflug (GER) 7
 Iver Horrem and  (NOR) 18
 Jake Gibb and Stein Metzger (USA) 38
17.  Emanuel Rego and Ricardo Santos (BRA) 1
 Markus Egger and Martin Laciga (SUI) 6
 Patrick Heuscher and Stefan Kobel (SUI) 9
 Jørre Kjemperud and Tarjei Skarlund (NOR) 12
 Dain Blanton and Kevin Wong (USA) 22
 Emiel Boersma and  (NED) 32
  and  (NOR) 34
 João Brenha and Miguel Maia (POR) 48
25.  Jochem de Gruijter and Gijs Ronnes (NED) 15
 Nikolas Berger and Clemens Doppler (AUT) 19
 Linyin Xu and  (CHN) 20
 David Klemperer and Eric Koreng (GER) 21
 Peter Gartmayer and Robert Nowotny (AUT) 27
  and  (ESP) 35
  and  (NZL) 41
 Kentaro Asahi and Satoshi Watanabe (JPN) 44
33.  Andrew Schacht and Josh Slack (AUS) 11
 Pablo Herrera and Raul Mesa (ESP) 16
 Mariano Baracetti and  (ARG) 23
 Julien Prosser and Brett Richardson (AUS) 24
 John Child and Mark Heese (CAN) 25
 Ramón Hernández and Raúl Papaleo (PUR) 29
 Juan Rossell and  (CUB) 30
 Vegard Hoidalen and  (NOR) 33
  and  (GER) 36
 Thomas Kroger and  (GER) 37
  and  (CAN) 39
 Björn Berg and  (SWE) 40
 Stéphane Canet and Mathieu Hamel (FRA) 42
  and Katsuhiro Shiratori (JPN) 45
 Florian Gosch and  (AUT) 46
  and  (FRA) 47

Women's competition[]

Final ranking[]

Rank Athletes Seed
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh (USA) 19
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Juliana Felisberta and Larissa França (BRA) 1
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Tian Jia and Wang Fei (CHN) 5
4.  Dalixia Fernández and Tamara Larrea (CUB) 13
5.  Shelda Bede and Adriana Behar (BRA) 2
 Wang Lu and  (CHN) 26
7.  Rachel Wacholder and Elaine Youngs (USA) 3
 Rebekka Kadijk and Merel Mooren (NED) 15
9.  Ana Paula Connelly and Leila Barros (BRA) 4
 Stephanie Pohl and Okka Rau (GER) 6
 Vassiliki Arvaniti and Vasso Karadassiou (GRE) 8
 Efthalia Koutroumanidou and Maria Tsiartsiani (GRE) 23
13.  Susanne Lahme and Danja Müsch (GER) 9
 Simone Kuhn and Lea Schwer (SUI) 11
  and  (GER) 12
 Milagros Crespo and Imara Esteves (CUB) 13
17.  Agatha Bednarczuk and Sandra Pires (BRA) 7
  and  (FRA) 16
 Nila Håkedal and Ingrid Tørlen (NOR) 17
 Sanne Keizer and Marrit Leenstra (NED) 22
 Marie-Andrée Lessard and  (CAN) 37
 Mayra García and Hilda Gaxiola (MEX) 41
  and  (GER) 47
 Sara Goller and Laura Ludwig (GER) 48
25.  Daniela Gattelli and Lucilla Perrotta (ITA) 10
 Angela Clarke and  (AUS) 18
 Laura Bruschini and  (ITA) 21
 Guylaine Dumont and  (CAN) 6
 Natalie Cook and Summer Lochowicz (AUS) 29
  and  (FRA) 6
 Ines Pianka and Jana Vollmer (GER) 35
 Mika Teru Saiki and  (GER) 6
33.  Lina Yanchulova and Petia Yanchulova (BUL) 14
 Jennifer Boss and Holly McPeak (USA) 6
  and  (AUT) 24
 Chiaki Kusuhara and  (JPN) 25
  and Zhang Xi (CHN) 28
 Emilia Nyström and Erika Nyström (FIN) 30
 Kathrine Maaseide and  (NOR) 33
  and  (SUI) 34
 Annie Martin and  (CAN) 36
  and  (ESP) 39
  and  (ESP) 40
  and  (AUT) 42
  and Cati Pol (ESP) 43
 Doris Schwaiger and Stefanie Schwaiger (AUT) 44
 Nicoletta Luciani and Annamaria Solazzi (ITA) 45
 Eiko Koizumi and Shinako Tanaka (JPN) 46

References[]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""