Association | Volleyball Federation of Vietnam | ||
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Confederation | AVC | ||
Head coach | Hidehiro Irisawa | ||
FIVB ranking | 44 (as of August 2016) | ||
Uniforms | |||
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http://www.vfv.org.vn/ |
Medal record | ||
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Southeast Asian Games | ||
2001 Kuala Lumpur | Team | |
2003 Hanoi | Team | |
2005 Manila | Team | |
2007 Nakhon Ratchasima | Team | |
2009 Vientiane | Team | |
2011 Palembang/Jakarta | Team | |
2013 Naypyidaw | Team | |
2015 Singapore | Team | |
1997 Jakarta | Team |
The Vietnam women's national volleyball team (Vietnamese: Đội tuyển bóng chuyền nữ quốc gia Việt Nam) represents Vietnam in international volleyball competitions and friendly matches. It is managed by the Volleyball Federation of Vietnam.
One of their greatest success was at the 2012 Asian Women's Cup Volleyball Championship in Kazakhstan, when the team finished fourth in the overall rankings.
Vietnam qualified for the 2012 Asian Women's Cup Volleyball Championship as the seventh seeded team, based on their ranking in the 2011 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship.
In the 2012 Asian Women's Cup Volleyball Championship, Vietnam was placed in Group B together with China, Japan, Iran. Vietnam finished second in the Group. In the quarter-finals, Vietnam faced South Korea which finished fourth at the 2012 Summer Olympics. Nguyễn Thị Ngọc Hoa scored 31 points in this thrilling game in which Korea was beaten, 3-2. It was their first win over Korea as far as AVC games are concerned. The Vietnamese were outplayed by Thailand in the semi-finals. On 16 September 2012, Vietnam was beaten by the host Kazakhstan 0-3 in the bronze medal match. In the overall-rankings, Vietnam took fourth place.
The following is the Vietnamese roster in the 2016 Asian Cup Championship.