The best and the popularity of Volleyball Professionals

The Association of Volleyball Professionals, or AVP, is a beach volleyball tour which takes place throughout the United States. The summer tour starts in April and continues almost every weekend until the end of September and a winter tour starts in January and hosts tournaments Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays until the end of February.
Effective August 13, 2010 AVP discontinued operations because of financial hardship.[1] The investment group RJSM Partners, which was originally a minority investor in AVP,[2] has had a controlling interest in it since April 2009.[3] The tour's marquee event, the Manhattan Open, would still take place, although under constrained circumstances.[4]

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[edit] History

The Association of Volleyball Professionals began on July 21, 1983, as a reaction by the top beach volleyball players to what they perceived as overly-greedy private tournament promoters. The frst logo design was provided by Ken Jencks and Steve Fisher of the Manhattan Beach Recreation Department.
One of the earliest tour sponsors was Miller Lite beer and play involved a double-elimination format, with select tournaments sponsored by Jose Cuervo tequila offering additional prize money and a unique format that narrowed the field to the top 8 teams, which then played in a round-robin to determine the top two teams for the championship match. Only men were allowed to compete on the tour until the women's tour, the Women's Professional Volleyball Association which had a separate sponsorship with Coors, ceased operations in the late 80's and a women's format was added to the AVP tour schedule.
The winningest men's teams in the history of the tour include Jim Menges/Greg Lee (70's), Sinjin Smith/Randy Stoklos (80's), Karch Kiraly/Kent Steffes (90's), and Todd Rogers/Phil Dalhausser (00's). After the merger of the AVP and the WPVA/BVA, the top women's teams include Holly McPeak/Nancy Reno (80's) and then McPeak with Elaine Youngs (90's), Misty May/Kerri Walsh, and Elaine Youngs/Nicole Branaugh (00's), along with Rachel Wacholder-Scott and Jenn Kessy-Boss/April Ross.
After experiencing a boom in interest in the 80's, the tour fell on hard financial times and filed for bankruptcy in the late 90's, still owing prize money to players, the most vocal of whom was Steffes who refused to play in any more professional tournaments unless the tour could actually show him the cash prize money. When the AVP logo was picked up by Leonard Armato and the tour was reconstituted under Armato's guidance, Steffes was one player who was noticeably absent. Still, the tour managed to attract the top men's and women's players and continued to grow.
When Scott Ayakatubby and Brian Lewis won the season championship with Nissan as the tour's title sponsor, they were given the use of bright-yellow Nissan pick-up trucks for a year. During the off-season, Ayakatubby was involved in a drunk-driving accident with his truck; wherein he bounced off a series of parked cars on either side of a residential street while trying to drive to his apartment late at night after heavy drinking. Nissan revoked its sponsorship for the following season. Ayakatubby entered an alcohol rehabilitation program and was never in contention for a title thereafter. Lewis quit playing on the tour and pursued commercial opportunities with Quiksilver, marketing nutritional supplements.
After Nissan terminated its relationship with the AVP, the main tournament sponsorship was picked up by Crocs footwear, who agreed to continue to use the bright yellow with black trim "corporate colors" that the AVP had agreed to use under Nissan's sponsorship. Due to market downturn, Crocs ended its sponsorship two seasons later. During the final year of play of the AVP, Nivea had signed as the title sponsor.

[edit] The 2010 AVP NIVEA Tour

In 2010 the AVP was scheduled to host 12 major events all over the United States but instead ceased operations in July, approximately half-way through the tour's 2010 calendar, and filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection at the end of October.[5] The tour, up to that point, had featured more than 150 of the world’s best volleyball athletes; among them Olympic Gold medalists Misty May-Treanor, Kerri Walsh, Phil Dalhausser, and Todd Rogers.

[edit] Notable players

[edit] Women

[edit] Men

The top players on the 2005 AVP tour were Jake Gibb / Stein Metzger on the men's side and Kerri Walsh-Jennings / Misty May-Treanor on the women's side.
The top players on the 2006 AVP tour were Phil Dalhausser/Todd Rogers on the men's side. Misty May-Treanor/Kerri Walsh-Jennings were the top players on the women's side. The top rivals, respectively were Mike Lambert/Stein Metzger on the men's side and Rachel Wacholder/Elaine Youngs on the women's side.

[edit] Other notable people

[edit] Chris (Geeter) McGee

Chris McGee, or as everyone calls him, “Geeter”, is the announcer for the AVP tour. His enthusiasm makes him the perfect voice for the beach atmosphere while he also motivates the players to be their best by studying their personal lives and announcing exactly what they want to hear.
He was born in Northridge, CA on September 10, 1971, also known as the San Fernando Valley. He resides in Manhattan Beach, CA with his wife Jessica and his baby, Milly. Other than the AVP, he has announced for the Lakers and for the University of Southern California football games. He played volleyball in college at Cal State Northridge losing in the NCAA Finals to UCLA in 1993.

[edit] Significant moments in history

[edit] 1980s

  • 1983 On July 21, the Association of Volleyball Professionals (AVP) is formed to protect players' interests and to preserve the integrity of beach volleyball.
  • 1984 Players strike at the World Championships in Redondo Beach. The AVP begins running its own tour.
  • 1985 Bolle Sunglasses joins the AVP as a major sponsor. The total tour prize money reaches $275,000.
  • 1985 The AVP Tour includes stops in eight states ( California, Florida, Colorado, Illinois, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Arizona, and Hawaii).
  • 1986 AVP Pro Beach Volleyball receives cable television coverage via "Prime Ticket", and Pro Beach Volleyball makes its network debut on ABC's Wide World of Sports.
  • 1988 The AVP awards cash prizes for twenty-seven tournaments. The AVP signs a three-year contract with Miller that results in a total of $4.5 million in prize money. Miller hires the AVP to produce twenty-three Lite Beer events.

[edit] 1990s

The early to mid 90's are seen by many as the "glory years" of the AVP as the tour corporate sponsorship, and thus, prize money, was at its peak. This period was largely dominated by the team of volleyball legend Karch Kiraly and Kent Steffes. The AVP also begun to hold women's events, competing with the Women's Professional Volleyball Association (WPVA) tour.
  • 1990 NBC Sports makes its debut on the beach volleyball scene, broadcasting the Hermosa Beach event.
  • 1991 The AVP adds the King of the Beach Event to their schedule. This event features a unique format where players play round-robin with different partners to determine the "King of the Beach." One of the event's creators, Karch Kiraly, wins the inaugural title.
  • 1991 NBC Sports provides the first live coverage of an AVP tournament in Milwaukee.
  • 1993 NBC Sports broadcasts a record ten AVP Tour events in a year in which prize money totals $3.7 million and more than 600,000 people attend AVP tournaments.
  • 1993 AVP holds women's events at sixteen of the men's tour stops. In a unique format, eight players comprising four teams, exchanging partners weekly, battle all season with prize money paid at the end of the year. Holly McPeak wins the tour championship with eleven victories to claim the $65,000 first prize.
  • 1994 The Miller Lite/AVP Tour and its twenty-seven events approach the $4 million mark in total prize money. Evian and Nestea join the growing list of AVP sponsors with Evian opting for an indoor event in Madison Square Garden.
  • 1994 NBC's total broadcast time climbs to twenty-one hours for ten events.
  • 1995 The Miller Lite/AVP Tour grows to a record twenty-nine tournaments. The Evian Indoor Series becomes a full pre-season circuit, with events in Washington, DC, Boston, Minneapolis and New York.
  • 1996 AVP teams dominate the U.S. Olympic Trials in Baltimore with the teams of Karch Kiraly/Kent Steffes and Mike Dodd/ Mike Whitmarsh advancing as the U.S. Olympic Team representatives.
  • 1997 The 38th annual Manhattan Beach Open is canceled due to legal issues and a lawsuit brought against the City of Manhattan Beach, Los Angeles County, and the AVP by a small local interest group. The event is moved down the coast to Hermosa Beach and renamed the Miller Lite Hermosa Beach Grand Slam.
  • 1997 The AVP business collapses under mounting financial problems. AVP CEO Jerry Solomon is fired and Harry Usher, former US Olympic organizer is hired to run 1998 AVP Tour.
  • 1998 Prize money is drastically cut as sponsors pull back on their support of the AVP. The AVP continues to struggle under extreme financial burden.
  • 1998 Bill Berger and Dan Vrebalovich take over management of the AVP as CEO and COO respectively. They immediately fund the day to day business, and begin to restructure the AVP from a players association to a for-profit, privately owned entity. The AVP is placed into chapter 11 bankruptcy, the players are signed to new long-term agreements as independent contractors and a long-term turnaround deal is agreed to by the AVP's creditors.
  • 1999 Berger and Vrebalovich form a partnership with Spencer Trask Securities to form Major League Volleyball. MLV purchases the AVP out of bankruptcy and funds the 1999 Tour. The AVP holds twelve events with a total of $1 million prize money.
  • 1999 The AVP once again sanctions women's events at five men's tournament tour stops. At the season ending event, combined with the King of the Beach, Holly McPeak is crowned Queen of the Beach.

[edit] 2000 and Up

  • 2000 In a season of parity, eight different teams win tournaments in the eleven event season. Brazilian's Jose Loiola and Emanuel Rego top the season with three victories.
  • 2001 AVP unites the world's best men's and women's professional beach volleyball players under one umbrella organization. With this historic unification of the men's and women's competition, the 2001 AVP Tour will be able to capitalize on having one property that can maximize sponsor dollars, marketing opportunities, media coverage and prize money. The AVP will now stand alone as the only professional beach volleyball tour in the country. It will follow the regulations set forth by USA Volleyball and the Federation International de Volleyball (FIVB) and will allow its players to compete in official tournaments en route to the 2004 Olympics.
  • 2007 Hot Winter Nights, a series of 19 events in January and February, marks the first ever indoor beach volleyball tour.
  • 2010 AVP cancels season just before Manhattan Beach Open due to lack of financial means.

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