The International Volleyball Federation (FIVB) has partnered with the National Federation to boost France's beach volleyball programme, as it looks to help the nation in its target of winning medals at their home Paris 2024 Olympics.
It is also hoped that the Volleyball Empowerment targeted support initiative can assist with the development of beach volleyball in France beyond Paris 2024.
The project is set to cost $1.3 million (£1.1 million/€1.3 million) annually, of which 17 per cent is provided by the FIVB and the remaining amount from the French Volleyball Federation (FFvolley), French National Olympic and Sports Committee and Ministry of Sports and Government.
This follows three years of coaching support provided from 2019 through to 2021.
The initiative has been credited with helping FFvolley to strengthen its beach volleyball staff through the appointment of an additional physical trainer, statistician, physician and two physiotherapists to assist head coach Lissandro Dias Carvalho.
Indoor players Julien Lyneel and Rémi Bassereau have also been recruited to the beach volleyball set-up.
France are the reigning men's indoor volleyball Olympic champions, and FIVB President Ary Graça expressed his belief in the potential for growth of the beach discipline in the host country of the next Olympics.
"With French volleyball currently at a world-class level, there is no doubt there is undiscovered talent and unrealised potential when it comes to beach volleyball in France," the Brazilian official said.
"This potential is exactly what we are aiming to unlock through targeted national team support by providing the relevant human and technical resources to improve their national teams.
"This support is only possible through our tried and tested multi-stakeholder support model with other stakeholders within the Olympic Movement and other sports bodies, as well as local Governments, to ensure the best possible results and a long-lasting legacy for the sport in the respective country.
"This model is working very well in France, and we’re excited to follow the national teams on their development journeys to Paris 2024."
FFvolley President Eric Tanguy said that the targeted support scheme has "allowed us to better structure and strengthen the staff of our beach volleyball sector".
Tanguy referenced Paris 2024 as a "short-term priority", and outlined plans to "elevate the French teams" for Los Angeles 2028 and Brisbane 2032.
Beach volleyball events at Paris 2024 are due to be held at the temporary Eiffel Tower Stadium in front of the iconic landmark in the French capital, and are scheduled for July 27 to August 10 2024.
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Patrick Burke is a junior reporter at insidethegames.biz, having joined the team in 2021. He started out as the programme editor for local non-league football club Cammell Laird 1907 in 2014 at the age of 15, and went on to serve as the club's media officer for six years, all on a voluntary basis. He studied history at the University of Sheffield from 2017, graduating with a first-class honours degree in 2020 where his dissertation was on the People's Olympiad in Barcelona in 1936. Whilst at Sheffield, Burke was sports editor and then deputy editor of Forge Press, one of the United Kingdom’s leading student newspapers. Burke spent a summer studying at Waseda University in Tokyo in 2018, and during sixth form travelled to Sierra Leone on an immersion retreat as well as the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.
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For nearly 15 years now, insidethegames.biz has been at the forefront of reporting fearlessly on what happens in the Olympic Movement. As the first website not to be placed behind a paywall, we have made news about the International Olympic Committee, the Olympic and Paralympic Games, the Commonwealth Games and other major events more accessible than ever to everybody.
insidethegames.biz has established a global reputation for the excellence of its reporting and breadth of its coverage. For many of our readers from more than 200 countries and territories around the world the website is a vital part of their daily lives. The ping of our free daily email alert, sent every morning at 6.30am UK time 365 days a year, landing in their inbox, is as a familiar part of their day as their first cup of coffee.
Even during the worst times of the COVID-19 pandemic, insidethegames.biz maintained its high standard of reporting on all the news from around the globe on a daily basis. We were the first publication in the world to signal the threat that the Olympic Movement faced from the coronavirus and have provided unparalleled coverage of the pandemic since.
As the world begins to emerge from the COVID crisis, insidethegames.biz would like to invite you to help us on our journey by funding our independent journalism. Your vital support would mean we can continue to report so comprehensively on the Olympic Movement and the events that shape it. It would mean we can keep our website open for everyone. Last year, nearly 25 million people read insidethegames.biz, making us by far the biggest source of independent news on what is happening in world sport.
Every contribution, however big or small, will help maintain and improve our worldwide coverage in the year ahead. Our small and dedicated team were extremely busy last year covering the re-arranged Olympic and Paralympic Games in Tokyo, an unprecedented logistical challenge that stretched our tight resources to the limit.
The remainder of 2022 is not going to be any less busy, or less challenging. We had the Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games in Beijing, where we sent a team of four reporters, and coming up are the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, the Summer World University and Asian Games in China, the World Games in Alabama and multiple World Championships. Plus, of course, there is the FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
Unlike many others, insidethegames.biz is available for everyone to read, regardless of what they can afford to pay. We do this because we believe that sport belongs to everybody, and everybody should be able to read information regardless of their financial situation. While others try to benefit financially from information, we are committed to sharing it with as many people as possible. The greater the number of people that can keep up to date with global events, and understand their impact, the more sport will be forced to be transparent.
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