Posiciones de voleibol explicadas: roles, rotaciones y cuál te pega
Colocador, punta, central, opuesto, líbero — cada posición desglosada con responsabilidades, perfil ideal y cómo saber cuál es la tuya.
Por VolleyLab Coaching Staff
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El resto de este artículo está disponible en inglés mientras terminamos la traducción.
Leer la versión completa en inglésModern indoor volleyball uses six positions, but only five specialties. Here's the honest breakdown of what each one does — and which one your body and brain are probably built for.
Setter
The quarterback. Touches every second ball, decides who scores, calls the offense. Reads defenses in real time. Best for players with elite hand-eye coordination and a mind that stays calm when everything speeds up.
Outside hitter (OH)
The all-court attacker — hits, receives serve, plays back-row defense. Needs balance across every skill. If you love long rallies and hate specializing, this is you.
Opposite (OPP)
Right-side power. Attacks from position 2, blocks the opponent's outside, gets the ball when the pass is broken. Usually the heaviest hitter on the team.
Middle blocker (MB)
The rim protector. Every block starts and ends with you. Runs quick tempo attacks. Height helps but reactive footwork matters more.
Libero (L)
The floor. Doesn't attack from in front of the 3 m line, doesn't serve in most codes, but touches almost every ball in the back court. Reads earlier than anyone.
How to pick your position
- Tallest 25% of your team + jumps well → middle or opposite
- Best hands and IQ → setter
- Best reader + lowest to the floor → libero
- All-around, competitive, love to be in every rally → outside hitter
VolleyLab builds a training program tuned to your position: setters get hand and IQ drills, middles get slide footwork and blocking reads, liberos get platform and reading work.
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