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CVL · 50
Final05/02/2026–05/04/2026
Sun 05/0425–16 · 22–25 · 21–25 · 23–25
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Thu 02/0425–23 · 25–18 · 25–22
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Sun 29/0325–20 · 25–20 · 18–25 · 21–25 · 15–10
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Sun 08/02
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Sun 08/0227–25 · 23–25 · 21–25 · 14–25
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Sun 08/02
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Sun 08/0225–17 · 25–14 · 25–11
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Thu 05/0225–27 · 21–25 · 21–25
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Thu 05/0226–24 · 25–23 · 25–14
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5th place26/03/2026–29/03/2026
Sun 29/0325–27 · 20–25 · 20–25
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Thu 26/0325–21 · 25–17 · 26–24
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3rd Place26/03/2026–29/03/2026
Sun 29/0325–22 · 25–21 · 25–22
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Thu 26/0327–25 · 20–25 · 25–17 · 16–25 · 19–21
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7th place26/03/2026–29/03/2026
Sun 29/0325–20 · 28–26 · 25–13
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Thu 26/0320–25 · 27–25 · 17–25 · 20–25
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Semi-finals19/03/2026–22/03/2026
Sun 22/0325–22 · 25–22 · 25–20
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Sun 22/0325–21 · 23–25 · 20–25 · 17–25
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Sun 22/0325–20 · 25–23 · 27–25
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Sun 22/0323–25 · 18–25 · 19–25
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Thu 19/0327–25 · 25–17 · 25–21
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Thu 19/0322–25 · 25–22 · 22–25 · 25–23 · 15–9
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Thu 19/0325–19 · 21–25 · 18–25 · 23–25
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Thu 19/0325–27 · 25–19 · 20–25 · 18–25
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Results15/03/2026
Sun 15/0325–18 · 23–25 · 25–14 · 25–22
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Sun 15/0325–21 · 25–21 · 25–16
Match Details

Teams

CVL

All 10 teams competing in the CVL 2025 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

CVL

Browse 11 archived seasons of the CVL, from 2013 to 2025. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 16 Mar 2025

Founded1996

The Chinese Volleyball League was established in 1996 as an amateur competition organized by the Chinese Volleyball Association (CVA), marking the beginning of systematic domestic volleyball competition in China. The league underwent a transformative professionalization in 2017 with a massive investment of 1 billion RMB, rebranding to the Chinese Volleyball Super League and establishing the two-tier A-League (elite) and B-League (development) structure. Major structural changes included expanding from 12 teams to 14 in the A-League following the 2017/18 season, introducing a modern playoff format in place of straight standings, and implementing promotion-relegation mechanisms between divisions. The league has evolved from a domestic showcase into a global powerhouse, regularly producing Olympic medalists and World Championship competitors, with Tianjin becoming the first Asian club to reach the FIVB Club World Championship finals (2024) and winning six Asian Club Championships.

  • 1996 — Chinese Volleyball League founded with 12 teams in both men's and women's divisions
  • 1996-1999 — Sichuan wins first three consecutive titles, establishing early dominance
  • 2002-2016 — Shanghai Bright dominates men's competition with 14 consecutive titles
  • 2017 — League rebranded to Chinese Volleyball Super League with 1 billion RMB investment and professionalization
  • 2017/18 — Teams expanded to 14 per division; modern playoff format introduced
  • 2019-2024 — Tianjin Bohai Bank women's team wins five consecutive titles
  • 2024 — Tianjin reaches FIVB Club World Championship finals, best-ever finish by an Asian club

Competition Format 16 Mar 2025

Teams14Relegation spots2

The CVL operates a home-and-away double round-robin format during the regular season, with all 14 teams playing 26 matches (13 home, 13 away) from October to December. Teams are ranked by total points, with the top 8 advancing to the group stage playoffs. The playoff structure includes a group stage where teams are seeded and compete in groups, followed by semifinals and a best-of-five finals series that determines the champion. The bottom two teams in the regular season face the top two teams from the B-League in promotion-relegation challenge matches, with the A-League clubs needing to finish above B-League challengers to retain their status.

Records 16 Mar 2025

Most titlesShanghai Bright (18)All-time top scorerZhou Yuan (510 points)

Li Yingying holds the single-match scoring record with 43 points in the 2018 finals, achieved at just 18 years old while also winning MVP honors that season.

Analysis 16 Mar 2025

Current Season Analysis

The 2024/25 CVL season is shaping up as one of the most competitive in recent history, with Shanghai and Hebei emerging as co-leaders after 17 matches played. Both clubs sit level on 26 points with identical 13-4 records, though Shanghai holds a superior goal difference (+24 versus +19) and boasts a formidable offensive record of 43 goals scored against just 19 conceded. This tight championship race marks a significant shift in the league's power dynamics, with Shanghai reclaiming the title last season after a period of challenge, while Hebei continues to establish itself as a consistent top-tier contender.

Qingdao pursues the leaders in third place with 0 from 0 matches (11 wins, 6 losses), maintaining a respectable +0 goal with 40 goals scored. The gap between the top two and third place is manageable at just four points, suggesting the title race remains wide open heading into the business end of the season. Tianjin (20 points) and Beijing (18 points) occupy the fourth and fifth positions respectively, both within striking distance of the podium places. Tianjin's presence in the top five is particularly noteworthy given their status as a global powerhouse—their recent FIVB Club World Championship finals appearance demonstrates their quality extends beyond domestic competition.

The relegation battle presents a starkly different narrative, with in catastrophic form, languishing at the bottom with just 2 points from 17 matches and a devastating -37 goal difference. Their single victory from 17 games (0%) represents a crisis situation requiring immediate intervention. Zhejiang (10 points, 5 wins) and Jiangsu and Fujian (both 4 points from just 6 matches) are also in precarious positions, though their incomplete match schedules suggest these teams may still have opportunities to climb the table. The contrast between the competitive top tier and the struggling bottom tier underscores the significant quality gap between elite and developing clubs in the A-League.

Standout performer of the season: The Shanghai team's balanced excellence—combining the league's best defense (19 goals conceded) with elite attacking prowess (43 goals scored)—demonstrates a well-rounded squad capable of winning tight contests. Their +24 goal difference is the league's best by a margin of 5 goals, suggesting they possess the tactical discipline and execution required to claim the title. Individual player performances have been consistently strong across the top teams, with Shanghai's roster depth enabling them to maintain form across the entire season.

Unexpected storyline: The emergence of Hebei as a genuine title contender represents the season's most compelling narrative. Matching Shanghai point-for-point and winning 76% of their matches places them among the elite performers in CVL history at this stage of the season. Historically dominated by Shanghai's 14-year consecutive title streak (2002-03 to 2015-16), the recent shift toward competitive balance suggests the league's professionalization investment is succeeding in distributing talent across multiple clubs. Additionally, the complete collapse of Liaoning—a club that has competed in the top division for years—raises questions about squad stability and investment sustainability during China's broader economic adjustments, a narrative that extends beyond volleyball into broader sports management challenges in the Chinese system.

The Shanghai Bright Dynasty and Modern Competitive Balance

Shanghai Bright's 18 championship titles across the CVL's 29-year history represents unprecedented dominance in Asian volleyball. Their extraordinary 14-consecutive-title streak from 2002-03 through 2015-16 established a benchmark for sustained excellence that few sports franchises globally can match. This era of Shanghai dominance coincided with the league's development from an amateur competition into a professional enterprise, with Shanghai leveraging superior resources and recruitment to maintain their advantage. However, the recent title distribution—with Jiangsu claiming the 2023/24 men's championship and Shanghai reclaiming it in 2024/25—suggests the competitive landscape has matured. The professionalization investment of 2017 appears to have succeeded in elevating multiple clubs simultaneously, creating a more balanced competition that benefits the sport's overall development in China.

Women's Division Excellence and Asian Dominance

The women's CVL has emerged as a particular source of pride for Chinese volleyball, producing athletes of world-class caliber. Tianjin Bohai Bank's record five-consecutive-title streak from 2019-20 through 2023-24 established them as the women's equivalent of Shanghai's men's dynasty. More significantly, Tianjin's 2024 performance at the FIVB Club World Championship—reaching the finals as the first Asian club to achieve this feat—represents a watershed moment for the league's international standing. The club's six Asian Club Championships underscore their continental dominance, while their World Championship silver medal finish in 2024 demonstrated that CVL champions can compete at the absolute highest level of global club volleyball. This success has elevated the entire league's profile, attracting international player recruitment and enhancing commercial value.

Format Evolution and Playoff Dynamics

The transition from a simple standings-based championship to the modern playoff format introduced in 2017 has fundamentally altered how titles are contested. The group stage playoff structure, followed by semifinals and best-of-five finals, introduces tactical complexity and rewards teams that peak at the right moment rather than simply accumulating the highest regular-season point total. This format mirrors successful models in other leagues worldwide and has proven effective in generating dramatic finishes and compelling storylines. The two-tier A-League and B-League system with promotion-relegation challenge matches creates genuine consequences for performance, ensuring clubs cannot rest on historical status—a lesson Liaoning's current struggles illustrate vividly. This structure incentivizes sustained investment and competitive squad building across the entire professional system.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Chinese Volleyball Super League?

14 teams compete in the A-League (elite division) of the CVL. An additional 15 teams compete in the B-League (development division), with promotion-relegation between divisions determined by challenge matches.

Who has won the most Chinese Volleyball Super League titles?

Shanghai Bright holds the men's record with 18 titles (1997, 2002-03 through 2015-16). Tianjin Bohai Bank leads the women's division with 16 titles, including five consecutive championships from 2019-20 to 2023-24.

What is the CVL playoff format?

The top 8 teams from the 26-match regular season advance to a group stage playoff. Teams are seeded and compete in groups, with winners advancing to semifinals. The finals are decided in a best-of-five series.

How does relegation work in the Chinese Volleyball Super League?

The bottom two A-League teams compete in challenge matches against the top two B-League teams. A-League clubs must finish above their B-League challengers to retain their status; losers are relegated to the B-League.

When was the Chinese Volleyball Super League founded?

The league was founded in 1996 as the Chinese Volleyball League with 12 teams. It was rebranded to the Chinese Volleyball Super League in 2017 following a major professionalization investment of 1 billion RMB.

Which teams are currently leading the 2024/25 season?

As of March 2025, Shanghai and Hebei are joint leaders with 26 points from 17 matches, each with 13 wins. Qingdao sits third with 22 points, followed by Tianjin and Beijing in the top five.

API data: 25 May 2026 · Content updated: 16 Mar 2025