CB Breogán

Breogán Lugo
Nickname Breo
Leagues Liga LEB
Founded 1966
History 1966 - present
Arena Pazo dos Deportes
(capacity: 7,500)
Location Lugo, Galicia
Team colors Sky blue and white
         
President Antonio Veiga
Head coach Lisardo Gómez
Championships 1 LEB Championship
1 Copa Príncipe
11 Copa Galicia
Website cbbreogan.com
Uniforms
Home
Away

Club Baloncesto Breogán, S.A.D. is a professional basketball team based in Lugo, Galicia. The team currently plays in league LEB Oro.

CB Breogán is also known as Cafés Candelas Breogán by sponsorship reasons.

History

Founded in 1966, CB Breogán only needed five years to promote for the first time in its history to the Liga Nacional. It played in it from 1971 to 1977, except in the 1974–75 season, before dropping down again to lower divisions.

Breogán came back to the top tier, now named Liga ACB in 1984, and it qualified for playing the Korac Cup after finishing in the sixth position. It became a classic team in the league until 1995, when it lost to against Valvi Girona and became relegated to Liga EBA.

Its third era in Liga ACB started in 1999 and lasted seven years. In 2006, Breogán was the last qualified in the table and was relegated to LEB Oro, where it continues playing nowadays.

Sponsorship naming

Season by season

Season Tier Division Pos. Postseason RS PO Copa del Rey Other cups European Competitions
1966–67 4 3ª Provincial 1 Promoted
1967–68 3 3ª División 1 Promoted
1968–69 2 2ª División 1 Promotion playoffs 10–2 5–4
1969–70 2 2ª División 1 Promoted 17–3
1970–71 1 1ª División 9 Relegation playoffs 8–14 1–1
1971–72 1 1ª División 11 Relegation playoffs 4–1–17 1–1
1972–73 1 1ª División 13 Relegation playoffs 11–19 1–1–0 Round of 16
1973–74 1 1ª División 15 Relegated 6–22
1974–75 2 2ª División 1 Promoted 25–3 4–0
1975–76 1 1ª División 10 Relegation group 8–14 6–4
1976–77 1 1ª División 12 Relegated 2–20 First round
1977–78 2 2ª División 9 13–2–15
1978–79 3 2ª División Relegated
1979–80 4 3ª División 1 Promoted
1980–81 3 2ª División 6 12–10
1981–82 3 2ª División Promoted
1982–83 2 1ª División B
1983–84 2 1ª División B 2 Promoted 18–8
1984–85 1 Liga ACB 6 Quarterfinalist 10–18 2–2 Copa Príncipe R3
1985–86 1 Liga ACB 7 Quarterfinalist 9–19 2–2 Copa Príncipe QF 3 Korać Cup GS 0–6
1986–87 1 Liga ACB 15 Relegated 12–16 1–3 Copa Príncipe SF
1987–88 2 1ª División B 5 Promoted 25–11 4–4
1988–89 1 Liga ACB 21 Relegation playoffs 16–20 4–5 First round
1989–90 1 Liga ACB 17 Relegation playoffs 19–17 3–1 Quarterfinalist
1990–91 1 Liga ACB 16 Round of 16 15–19 2–4 First round
1991–92 1 Liga ACB 20 Relegation playoffs 12–22 3–0 First round
1992–93 1 Liga ACB 17 12–19 Third round
1993–94 1 Liga ACB 16 Round of 16 10–18 0–2 Third round
1994–95 1 Liga ACB 20 Relegated 10–28 2–3 First round
1995–96 2 Liga EBA 1 Quarterfinalist 25–5 2–4
1996–97 2 LEB 3 Semifinalist 17–9 5–4 Copa Príncipe 4th
1997–98 2 LEB 3 Semifinalist 15–9 4–3 Copa Príncipe QF
1998–99 2 LEB 1 Promoted 18–8 8–2 Copa Príncipe QF
1999–00 1 Liga ACB 13 15–19
2000–01 1 Liga ACB 11 13–21
2001–02 1 Liga ACB 13 13–21
2002–03 1 Liga ACB 9 17–17
2003–04 1 Liga ACB 15 14–20
2004–05 1 Liga ACB 11 13–21
2005–06 1 Liga ACB 18 Relegated 11–23
2006–07 2 LEB 9 17–17
2007–08 2 LEB Oro 4 Semifinalist 24–10 2–1 Copa Príncipe C
2008–09 2 LEB Oro 6 Quarterfinalist 23–11 0–2
2009–10 2 LEB Oro 8 Quarterfinalist 19–15 1–3
2010–11 2 LEB Oro 5 Semifinalist 18–16 3–4
2011–12 2 LEB Oro 8 Quarterfinalist 19–15 1–3
2012–13 2 LEB Oro 6 Quarterfinalist 14–12 2–3
2013–14 2 LEB Oro 4 Semifinalist 18–8 2–4
2014–15 2 LEB Oro 3 Finalist 20–8 7–5 Copa Príncipe RU

Trophies and awards

Trophies

Records

Individual awards

All-ACB Team

ACB Top Scorer

ACB Three Point Shootout Champion

All LEB Oro First Team

Roster

Pos. Starting 5 Bench 1 Bench 2 Bench 3
C Senegal Michel Diouf Spain Manu Gómez Spain Martín Gómez
PF Netherlands Roeland Schaftenaar Spain Adrián Laso Republic of the Congo Charles Nkaloulou
SF Spain Álex López Spain Pablo Almazán Iceland Haukur Pálsson
SG United States Tyrus McGee Argentina Spain Álex Bortolussi
PG Spain Dani Rodríguez Spain Adrián Chapela


See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 09, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.