Kristen Nuss, Taryn Kloth put final golden exclamation point on successful Paris quad
December 9, 2024
February 4, 2023
The 2023 AVP schedule was announced Friday, looking both similar and a touch different than its first under the ownership of Bally’s Sports.
Most notable is the reduction in events, from 15 to 12, all of which came by trimming the number of Tour Series events, a justifiable move, given that six of the 15 tournaments in 2022 were for the lowest level of AVP professional.
Why is the AVP beginning so early in the year, earlier than it has since many of the younger players were even born? Because the March 17-19 weekend, when the AVP will make its season debut in Miami, marks the 40th anniversary of the AVP’s founding, when our disgruntled founding fathers struck back at Event Concepts and formed their own players union (you can read all about that in Kings of Summer if you’d like).
Forty years later, the AVP, mercurial as some of those years may have been, is still the No. 1 domestic tour in the world.
For the first time since 2017 — in a full season not impacted by a pandemic — the AVP will not be stopping in Austin, Texas. This has, of course, caused some grumbling to the beach volleyball fans in Austin. It’ll also probably be a disappointment to Phil Dalhausser, who won four of the last five AVP tournaments in Austin, dating to 2005, when he logged his first professional victory with Nick Lucena.
Texan fans can likely find company in their misery with Floridan fans, who were treated to two tournaments in 2022 — in Fort Lauderdale and Tavares — before getting only Miami in 2023. To be fair, Tavares was an emergency add in December to fill in for Atlantic City, a September Pro Series event which was dropped in a hurry after the Tour Series event proved to be hazardous to the players.
Somewhat worth noting is that when Tri Bourne and I were polled by fans this off-season about which three stops we’d drop from the 2022 season, Austin was on both of our lists, while Fort Lauderdale and Tavares were on Bourne’s. I added Atlantic City to mine. We’re obviously a small sample size, and while far from unanimous, our opinions aren’t all that unique from many of the players. All four of those stops are gone, at least for the time being.
If you are to look at the AVP and Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour schedules side by side, you’ll notice a rash of conflicts.
Significant ones, as well.
Miami is the same weekend as a Beach Pro Tour Challenge event in La Paz, Mexico, an event in which nine American men and 12 American women have signed up. Canadians Sarah Pavan and Sophie Bukovec, and Melissa Humana-Paredes and Brandie Wilkerson, however, are not on the list and could be freed up to play Miami. Also that same weekend is a Futures in New Zealand, which includes three American women and two American men.
That weekend is but one example of many.
New Orleans, which is six weeks earlier than the past two years, coincides with a Challenge in Brazil, Hermosa Beach and Waupaca — which already conflict with one another — conflict with the Gstaad Elite 16, Manhattan Beach conflicts with the Hamburg Elite 16, and Laguna is the same weekend as the final week of the World Championships in Tlaxcala, Mexico.
In a non-Olympic year, such conflicts are minor inconveniences at worst. In an Olympic year? Expect lighter than usual fields in New Orleans, Hermosa, and Manhattan.
Relatively new stops in Virginia Beach, Denver, and Waupaca were welcomed back to the schedule in 2023, while the Laguna Open received the promotion is has long deserved, upgraded from an AVPNext to a Tour Series.
Huntington Beach, one of the most popular stops on Tour during the Donald Sun era, returned to the schedule in 2022 as a Tour Series, and has been promoted to a Pro Series. There are no conflicts on that weekend, either, which should make for a fantastic tournament.
New Orleans, too, a stop that was dropped due to its fickle weather, is back on the schedule. The bar at Coconut Beach will be stocked and ready.
The qualifying system received a face lift in 2022, with the AVP using Tour Series and select AVPNexts to serve as qualifiers in lieu of the single elimination tournaments the day before the main draw. This year will be a mixed bag of both. Miami will have a single-elimination qualifier the day before, with a 24-team cap. Four teams will emerge from the qualifier into a 16-team main draw.
It is expected that the first three Pro Series events — Miami, New Orleans, Huntington Beach — will have on-site qualifiers the day before the main draw. After that, Tour Series events will most likely be used, although the AVP has yet to confirm which Tour Series events would be used for which Pro and Gold Series tournaments.
Just when we, alas, began to get a handle on the points system, with its shifting window due to the pandemic, we have another change. Listeners to SANDCAST should plug their ears for a bit when Bourne and I attempt to do the AP Calculus required to calculate the new system, which is broken into two levels of players based on how many events they have played in the last 365 days. Below, I’ve pasted the new point system verbatim from the AVP and you can make of it what you will.
The changes that do make sense, however, and are easy to understand, are the modifications to the points awarded to Tour Series events. Last year, the Tour Series were LOADED with points — unfairly so, in my opinion, and I say that as a Tour Series player who benefitted greatly from that system. The AVP has diluted the points you can earn at a Tour Series, which I think is smart and is now awarding points closer to the level of competition.
Below is the AVP’s distinction on level 1 and 2 players, and how their points are calculated differently.
We have also adjusted the weight of TOUR and PRO Series points when compared to GOLD Series points.
