In 1982, Ctvrtlik became a member of the Long Beach City College Vikings volleyball team.[6] He won the state championship and was selected as the MVP of the championship tournament.[6]
In 1983, Ctvrtlik played for Long Beach State and was an All-American.[2] He then transferred to Pepperdine to play his final collegiate year under the leadership and guidance of coaching legend Marv Dunphy,[7] winning the 1985 NCAA title and being selected as the MVP of the tournament.[6][8]
In 2009, Ctvrtlik was inducted into the Pepperdine Hall of Fame.[9]
After the Barcelona games, Ctvrtlik went to Europe to play in the Italian Club League for Brescia along with fellow Olympian Scott Fortune.[2] He returned to the national team in preparation for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, winning a bronze medal at the 1994 FIVB World Championship in Greece.[11] Ctvrtlik was selected as the Best Player in the World by the International Volleyball Federation in 1995, but the national team would fail to win a medal in the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.[9][15] He was regarded as one of the best serve receivers in the world.[9]
Beach volleyball
Ctvrtlik was a beach volleyball player on the professional four-man circuit.[9] He attained the "AAA" beach rating while playing on the two-man circuit.[9]
Ctvrtlik's business concerns include real estate rehabilitation projects as president of Green Street Properties, LLC in Huntington Beach, California, and import-exports, via his company, the Ciram Corporation.[11]
Ctvrtlik and his wife Cosette have three sons: Josef, Erik, and Matthew.[5] Matthew played volleyball for Harvard.[16]
^ abcdefg"Bob Ctvrtlik, 2017". Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on March 29, 2023. Retrieved July 30, 2023.