Men and women use the same volleyball equipment like the nets and the poles however if you are talking about gear lots of guys do not wear knee pads and the height for the net is different and sometimes in club volleyball the balls are different weights.
Yes. Medals are awarded for men's and women's indoor volleyball and men's and women's beach volleyball.
Men and women played on the college volleyball yeam [team] This is a simple sentence with a compound subject "men" and "women". The predicate is "played on the collge volleyball team."
Volleyball is a college sport played by both men and women. There are interesting distinctions: women play in the fall and men play in the spring. Not only this, the NCAA sponsors many more women's volleyball programs than men's. There are 311 Division I Women's volleyball programs compared to 22 Division I Men's programs.
Yes, their are different net sizes for men vs. women.
Yes. The summer Olympics includes men's and women's beach and indoor volleyball.
Statistically speaking volleyball.
The men's and women's beach volleyball teams first competed at the 1996 Games in Atlanta. The men's and women's indoor volleyball teams first competed at the 2000 Games in Sydney.
No, there are definitely more women involved in volleyball than men.
Both men and women play indoor and beach volleyball. There are few competitive co-ed teams. There are more women's NCAA volleyball teams than men's. Mostly women play volley-ball but men can also play for fun or to compete with may other men who love to play volley-ball also.
Volleyball, both men's and women's, debuted at the 1964 Summer Games in Tokyo.
Beach volleyball, both men's and women's, debuted at the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta.
The 2001 NCAA Men's Volleyball Champion was BYU. The Women's Champion was Stanford.