Brose Bamberg

Brose Bamberg is a German professional basketball team from Bamberg, Franconia / North Bavaria. The club has won the German Championship title nine times and the German Cup five times. The club currently plays in the German top tier Basketball Bundesliga (BBL) and the Basketball Champions League. The license holder of the club is Bamberger Basketball GmbH.

Brose Bamberg
LeaguesBBL
Champions League
Founded1955 (1955)
History
ArenaBrose Arena
Capacity6,150[1][2]
LocationBamberg, Germany
Team colorsRed, silver, white
              
Main sponsorBrose Fahrzeugteile
PresidentNorbert Sieben
Head coachJohan Roijakkers
Team captainElias Harris
Affiliation(s)Baunach Young Pikes
Championships9 German Championships
5 German Cups
5 German Super Cups
Retired numbers3 (5, 6, 23)
Websitebrosebaskets.de
The GHP Bamberg era logo of the club, 2003–2006.

The club is sponsored by the German automotive supplier Brose Fahrzeugteile.

History

1955–2003: first Bundesliga years

The 1. FC 01 Bamberg basketball team was promoted to the Basketball Bundesliga, the German Basketball League, for the first time in 1970.[3] In 1988, after being relegated and promoted twice (relegations in 1979 and 1983, promotions in 1982 and 1984), and with 1. FC 01 Bamberg facing bankruptcy, the basketball division split to form a new club: TTL Basketball Bamberg. TTL stands for Tapeten-Teppichboden-Land, which is a wallpaper and carpet company. It was the first time the team name had reflected the name of its main sponsor. From 1995, the team was called TTL uniVersa Bamberg after uniVersa Versicherungen, an insurance company. In 1992, the team won the German Cup, earning Bamberg its first basketball trophy.

In 2000, following financial difficulties, the team was rescued by the TSK company and changed its name to TSK uniVersa Bamberg.

Differences of opinion between the main sponsor and the club in 2003 jeopardized the team's position in the Bundesliga and led to a new change of name.

2003–2006: first championship

During the 2003–04 to 2005–06 seasons, the team played in the Bundesliga under the name of its new sponsor, as GHP Bamberg. Having come second in the Championship twice in a row, in 2004/05 the team brought the German Championship title home to Bamberg for the first time.[3] This meant that GHP Bamberg qualified for the EuroLeague. In the following season (2005–06), the Bamberg team made it into the EuroLeague Top 16. It also played in the BBL Cup Final and in the semi-finals of the BBL playoffs.

2006–2009: first years as Brose Baskets

At the start of the 2006–07 season, the club changed its name to Brose Baskets to reflect the fact that Brose Fahrzeugteile GmbH & Co. KG had become the new primary sponsor. It was in this season that the team won its second Championship title. In 2007–08, the team did not manage to consolidate the previous year's success and was knocked out in the first round of the EuroLeague, having won two games. In May 2008, Brose Baskets failed to defend their Championship title, losing to EWE Baskets Oldenburg in the quarter-finals. One week later, trainer Dirk Bauermann announced his resignation.

On 2 June 2008, Chris Fleming signed a three-year contract as head coach. He had previously coached the Artland Dragons, who played Brose Baskets in the finals in 2007. Fleming, an American, was 38 at the time.[4] His long-term assistant coach, Arne Woltmann, also came with him from Quakenbrück.[5]

The first year under the new trainer was difficult and the team only just qualified for the playoffs (top eight teams), with two points more than the team in ninth place. Nevertheless, they went on to beat the team in second place, MEG Göttingen, but did not stand a chance against the Oldenburg team, who eventually won the Championship. In the following year, the points round did not go very well, but the team still qualified for the playoffs in fifth place. In the cup competition they made it into the Top 4 final in Frankfurt, where they beat Skyliners, the home team, by one point, bringing the cup back to Bamberg after 18 years, for the second time in the club's history. In the Championship playoffs, Bonn and Braunschweig, who had previously knocked Oldenburg, the winners of the first round, out of the competition, did not pose many problems and Bamberg went through to the finals. There they once again faced Skyliners Frankfurt. Brose Baskets lost the first home game but immediately fought back to achieve a 2:1 lead. Frankfurt won the fourth game in their own arena, which was as close run as the cup final had been. Eventually, however, Brose Baskets won the Championship title with a 72:70 in front of its own fans, achieving its first double win.

2010–2011: first treble

For the 2010–11 season, Brose Baskets managed to hold onto most of their players from the year before and made a few strategic additions. The well-rounded team went on to dominate the points round, losing only two out of 34 matches. The team also won the Cup competition,[3] defending their title against Braunschweig in the final in Bamberg, where they won 69:66. In the Championship competition, Brose Baskets beat Eisbären Bremerhaven easily in the quarter-final. In the semi-final, they suffered two surprise defeats away against Artland Dragons, and only won in the fifth deciding game. In the final against Alba Berlin, Brose Baskets once again displayed some weaknesses in their away performance. The Berlin team dominated most of the deciding game in the Stechert Arena, despite a good start from Brose Baskets. Nevertheless, Brose Baskets were able to turn the game around in the final quarter, finishing with a clear 72:65 victory. This earned them the German Championship title for the fourth time and meant they had achieved two double wins in succession. In this season, the team also won all their home Cup and Championship matches.

2011–2012: second treble

The Brose Baskets squad remained largely unchanged in the 2011–12 season, and departures were more than compensated for by strong additions. At the end of the main round, Bamberg was top of the table with 30 wins and four defeats. The team won the Cup again during this season.[3] In the Championship competition, Brose Baskets managed to beat Telekom Baskets Bonn 3:1 in the playoff quarter-final, despite suffering a surprise defeat in the first home game. This was their first defeat at home in 49 games. In the semi-final, Brose Baskets beat Artland Dragons, winning three out of a possible five games (best-of-five), and also won the final against ratiopharm Ulm 3:0. This was Brose Baskets’ third successive double win. Partly because of this success, several players signed bigger contracts with other teams at the end of the season, which meant it was not possible to keep the same squad intact the following season. Tibor Pleiß and Marcus Slaughter transferred to Spain, Brian Roberts and P.J. Tucker switched to the NBA, and Predrag Šuput moved to KK Cedevita in Croatia.

2012–2013: sixth German championship

As in the previous season, it was possible to keep the core team together in 2012–13, but injuries during the season led to a number of changes, which weakened the team. Nevertheless, Brose Baskets finished the main round of the Beko BBL at the top of the table with 26 wins. In contrast with previous years, the team failed to get through the qualifying round of the Cup competition, losing 69:77 at home to FC Bayern München. In the Championship competition, Brose Baskets faced Phoenix Hagen, beating them 3:1 and making it through to the semi-final of the playoffs. Here they came up against FC Bayern München, who they managed to beat 3:2 after five games. This meant they were through to the final for the fourth time in a row. Here the champions of the previous three years faced EWE Baskets Oldenburg. Brose Baskets won 3:0 in three straight games, securing the Championship title for the fourth time in a row.[3]

2013–2014: disappointing season

In the regular season Brose Baskets could not defend its top seed position from the three previous years finishing second behind Bayern Munich and thus facing the 7th seeded Artland Dragons in the playoff quarterfinals. The Dragons pulled off an upset and beat Brose with 3–1.[6] The team also failed to reach the BBL-Pokal Final and did not accomplish much in its European campaign. After the season the club parted ways with head coach Chris Fleming.[7] Long time great players of the club John Goldsberry and Casey Jacobsen put an end to their careers, and had their jersey numbers retired by the club.[8]

2014–2015: back on top

In the 2014–15 season, Brose Baskets came back on top of the German basketball world, after they beat the defending champions Bayern Munich 3–2 in the Finals.[3] Bamberg also finished the regular season in the first place. Bamberg's Bradley Wanamaker was named Basketball Bundesliga Finals MVP.

2015–2016: eighth German championship

In the 2015–16 season, Brose Baskets had an impressive EuroLeague campaign, in which the team survived the Regular Season and advanced to the Top 16. In the Bundesliga, Brose had an even more impressive season. The team finished first in the regular season by a wide margin, and eventually won the championship after sweeping all opponents in the playoffs.[9]

In August 2016, the Brose Baskets changed the name to Brose Bamberg.[10]

2016–17 EuroLeague and more domination in Germany

Through its championship in the 2015–16 season, Bamberg qualified for the 2016–17 EuroLeague, the first true European basketball league. Bamberg finished in the 10th place, with All-EuroLeague Second Team member Nicolò Melli leading the team.

In Germany, the team once again dominated. The BBL-Pokal was won after beating Bayern Munich in the Final. The ninth Basketball Bundesliga title of the club was won after sweeping EWE Baskets Oldenburg 3–0 in the BBL Finals.[11]

2018–19: First Champions League season

On 17 February 2019, Bamberg won its fifth BBL-Pokal after defeating Alba Berlin 83–82 in the final. In the 2018–19 season, Bamberg also made its debut in the Basketball Champions League. After playing in EuroLeague Basketball competitions since 2004, this was the first time the club participated in a FIBA-organised competition. In the quarter-finals, Bamberg narrowly beat defending champions AEK Athens to qualify for the 2019 Final Four.[12]

On 1 July 2020, Johan Roijakkers signed a 3-year contract as Bamberg's new head coach.[13]

Club identity

Logos

Honors

Domestic competitions

European competitions

Other Competitions

  • Zwolle, Netherlands Invitational Game
    • Winners (1): 2015
  • Bamberg, Germany Invitational Game
    • Winners (2): 2016, 2017
  • Bayreuth Tournament
    • Winners (1): 2016
  • Gmunden, Austria Invitational Game
    • Winners (1): 2016

Team venues

Nuremberg Arena, which has been used as home arena of the club.
Brose Arena, which has been the regular home arena of the club, since 2001.

Since 2001, Brose Bamberg has played its home games at Brose Arena, a venue that has undergone a number of name changes since it was built.

Following alterations to the building in 2006, it could hold up to 6,820, after originally having a seating capacity of 4,750 spectators for basketball games. In 2006, a large corporate zone and new corporate luxury boxes were also added to the arena. Thanks to the 2006 expansion, the arena also became big enough for Turkish Airlines EuroLeague games (EuroLeague minimum capacity arena rules – 5,000 seats). In 2016, the arena removed the fan's standing room section, in order to meet minimum EuroLeague arena regulations (no standing room only areas are allowed in EuroLeague arenas), which reduced the arena's seating capacity to 6,150.[1][2] Before brose ARENA met EuroLeague capacity requirements, European-wide home games of Brose had to take place at the 8,200 seat Arena Nürnberger Versicherung, which is located in Nuremberg, which is about 63 km (39 miles) in driving distance from Brose's home city of Bamberg.

Before Brose Arena (previously called Forum Bamberg, Jako Arena, and Stechert Arena) was built, the team played at the John F. Kennedy Hall, on the U.S. barracks site (Ausländische Militärbasen), in Bamberg, and later at the Graf Stauffenberg Hall.

Bamberg fans are famous for their devotion and unstinting support. Noisy support with drums, chants and a brass band provide a great atmosphere at the arena, known affectionately as "Frankenhölle"". An audio clip of the fans at the arena can be found here.[14]

Players

Retired numbers

Brose Bamberg retired numbers
No Nat. Player Position Tenure Date retired Ref
5John GoldsberryPG2008–201421 May 2014[8]
6Nikos ZisisPG2015–20197 September 2019[15]
23Casey JacobsenSF2006–2007, 2009–201421 May 2014[8]

Current roster

Brose Bamberg roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.Nat.NameHt.Wt.Age
PG 32 Obasohan, Retin 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) 94 kg (207 lb) 27 – (1993-07-06)6 July 1993
PF 43 Sengfelder, Christian 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) 112 kg (247 lb) 25 – (1995-02-28)28 February 1995
F/C 55 Atkins, Darion 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 104 kg (229 lb) 27 – (1992-09-17)17 September 1992
PG –– Hundt, Bennet 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) 70 kg (154 lb) 21 – (1998-08-20)20 August 1998
SG –– Lockhart, Dominic 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) 97 kg (214 lb) 26 – (1994-07-03)3 July 1994
G/F –– Ogbe, Kenneth 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) 86 kg (190 lb) 25 – (1994-11-16)16 November 1994
PG –– Larson, Tyler 1.91 m (6 ft 3 in) 86 kg (190 lb) 28 – (1991-12-31)31 December 1991
G –– Blakes, Gerry 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) 88 kg (194 lb) 26 – (1993-11-16)16 November 1993
SG –– Vitali, Michele 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) 86 kg (190 lb) 28 – (1991-10-31)31 October 1991
PF –– Fieler, Chase 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 109 kg (240 lb) 28 – (1992-06-10)10 June 1992
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
  • Thomas Crab
  • Dominik Günthner

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • Injured

Updated: 31 July 2020

Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.

Depth chart

Pos. Starting 5 Bench 1 Bench 2
C Dejan Kravic Darion Atkins
PF Christian Sengfelder Chase Fieler Mateo Seric
SF Kenneth Ogbe Dominic Lockhart
SG Gerry Blakes Michele Vitali
PG Retin Obasohan Tyler Larson Bennet Hundt

Season by season

Season Tier League Pos. German Cup European competitions
1991–92 1 Bundesliga 2nd Champion
1992–93 1 Bundesliga 2nd
1993–94 1 Bundesliga 1st Semi-finalist
1994–95 1 Bundesliga 1st 3FIBA Korać CupR1
1995–96 1 Bundesliga 4th Semi-finalist 3FIBA Korać CupR1
1996–97 1 Bundesliga 3rd Semi-finalist 3FIBA Korać CupR1
1997–98 1 Bundesliga 3rd 3FIBA Korać CupR3
1998–99 1 Bundesliga 6th Third place 3FIBA Korać CupR1
1999–00 1 Bundesliga 10th
2000–01 1 Bundesliga 10th
2001–02 1 Bundesliga 7th
2002–03 1 Bundesliga 2nd
2003–04 1 Bundesliga 2nd 3FIBA Europe LeagueEF
2004–05 1 Bundesliga 1st 2ULEB CupRS
2005–06 1 Bundesliga 3rd Finalist 1EuroleagueT16
2006–07 1 Bundesliga 1st 2ULEB CupRS
2007–08 1 Bundesliga 7th 1EuroleagueRS
2008–09 1 Bundesliga 4th 2EurocupRS
2009–10 1 Bundesliga 1st Champion 2EurocupT16
2010–11 1 Bundesliga 1st Champion 1EuroleagueRS
2011–12 1 Bundesliga 1st Champion 1EuroleagueRS
2012–13 1 Bundesliga 1st Quarter-finalist 1EuroleagueT16
2013–14 1 Bundesliga 5th Third place 1EuroleagueRS
2EurocupL32
2014–15 1 Bundesliga 1st Finalist 2EurocupEF
2015–16 1 Bundesliga 1st Semi-finalist 1EuroleagueT16
2016–17 1 Bundesliga 1st Champion 1EuroLeague13th
2017–18 1 Bundesliga 4th Quarter-finalist 1EuroLeague12th
2018–19 1 Bundesliga 5th Champion 3Champions League4th
2019–20 1 Bundesliga 6th Semifinals 3Champions LeagueRS

Notable players

Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.

Head coaches

1988–1994 Terence Schofield
1994–1999 Ken Scalabroni
1999–2001 Armin Andres
2001 Zoran Slavnić
2001–2008 Dirk Bauermann
2008–2014 Chris Fleming
2014–2018 Andrea Trinchieri
2018 Ilias Kantzouris
(interim head coach)
2018 Luca Banchi
2018–2019 Ainars Bagatskis
2019 Federico Perego
2019–2020 Roel Moors
2020–present Johan Roijakkers

Other important club personalities

  • Norbert Sieben (President)
  • Michael Stoschek (chairman of the supervisory board); other supervisory board members: Rolf Beyer (Vice chairman), Stefan Adam, Sandro Scharlibbe, Carl Steiner, Maximilian Stoschek[16]
  • Wolfgang Heyder (sports director)
  • Marco Beens (finance, organization and marketing director)
  • Marcus Lindner (athletics trainer)

Partnerships and youth development work

Brose Baskets and their partner clubs, offer young players excellent development opportunities. The aim is to provide attractive, high-class basketball, for sports fans and our industry partners, to broaden the sport's grassroots base, and to become even more successful and efficient at the top end of the game.

Brose Baskets and their registered association therefore run junior Under-9, Under-10, Under-12, Under-14, Under-16, and Under-19 teams, and collaborate with Baunach, a team in the German third-tier level Bundesliga (ProB).[17] Since the 2009–10 season, there is also a women's Under-17 WNBL professional team: Team Oberfranken. And another women’s team, DJK Brose Bamberg, has been playing in the 1st German Bundesliga, with support from Brose Baskets, since 2012.

Partner teams:[18]

  • Bike-Cafe Messingschlager Baunach (ProB)
  • TSV Tröster Breitengüßbach (South-East Regional League, NBBL, JBBL)
  • Brose Baskets e. V. (WNBL)
  • Regnitztal Baskets (2nd Regional League)
  • TTL Bamberg (2nd Regional League, Under-14 professional team)
  • DJK Don Bosco Bamberg (Under-13 professional team)
  • BG Litzendorf
  • SpVgg Roth
  • SG Köln99ers e.V.
  • Paderborn Baskets

Brose Baskets also work with a large number of other clubs, in the Under-12 to Under-19 range, as part of the Junior Franken project.

In addition, many of the players from Bamberg's youth program have been in the squads for the senior German national team and the German junior national teams. The senior German national men's A squad has included Brose players Karsten Tadda and Maik Zirbes. Bamberg has also had numerous players in the German Under-20, German Under-18, and German Under-16 squads, such as: Johannes Thiemann, Alexander Engel, Alina Hartmann, Dino Dizdarevic, Andreas Obst, Robert Zinn, Daniel Keppeler, Noah Kamdem, Leon Kratzer, Saskia Beringer, and Anne-Katrin Landwehr.

As well as running professional sports activities, Brose Baskets and their partner clubs, reach around 12,000 children and young people each year, through numerous leisure sports projects. These include: AG Grundschule (a primary school program), basketball promotion days, a school's league, basketball camps, and the Kinder+Sport Basketball Academy.[19]

On 1 October 2013, Förderverein Basketball Bamberg e. V., was renamed Brose Baskets e.V. The aim of the association, is to support youth development work in the area of basketball. As of February 2014, it had around 300 members.[20]

Fans

The club's broad fan support base within, a relatively small town of Bamberg (with around 76,000 inhabitants),[21] has led to the town receiving the nickname, "Freak City",[22] in basketball circles. The team's fan club, Faszination Basketball Bamberg, has nearly 1,000 members, making it the biggest basketball fan club in the German Beko BBL.[23] Brose Baskets also receives organized support from fan clubs Freak City Frankenpower[24] and Sektion Südblock,[25] among others.

gollark: I think they have an account on `procyon`, so maybe they can connect to its tailscale daemon and try and retrieve the current external IP of `loki`.
gollark: And our computers use osmarksISA-2028™.
gollark: osmarkscloud™.
gollark: Oh wait. HelloBoi has access.
gollark: If it is a DNS issue, I could debug it if I could get into osmarksnetnet™, but the keys for that are on my laptop, which I don't have right now.

See also

References

  1. Attendance: 6150. Archived 12 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "6150". Archived from the original on 12 January 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  3. Erfolge (in German).
  4. "Fleming, Chris". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  5. "Club-Trainer und Baskets-Coach im Gespräch". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  6. Brose Bamberg Aus im Viertelfinale (in German).
  7. "Brose Baskets trennen sich von Chris Fleming". Sportal.de. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  8. "Goodbye, John & Casey!". Brosebaskets.de (in German). Archived from the original on 28 May 2014. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  9. Domestic leagues roundup: June 12.
  10. Basketball: Aus Brose Baskets wird Brose Bamberg.
  11. "Threepeat und Sweep! Bamberg gewinnt drittes Spiel gegen Oldenburg und feiert den Titel / Causeur Finals-MVP {{in lang|de}}". Archived from the original on 28 February 2018. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
  12. "Super Freaks – a closer look at Brose Bamberg". FIBA.basketball. Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  13. "Bamberg hires Johan Roijakkers as head coach". Eurohoops. 1 July 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  14. "brose ARENA macht ein bisschen Lärm by @Teem72". Soundcloud.com. 13 February 2014. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  15. "Der 'My Part of History Tag' war (nahezu) ein voller Erfolg". Brose Bamberg Basketball. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
  16. "Neuer Aufsichtsrat der Bamberger Basketball GmbH". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  17. "Brose Baskets gehen auf Mitgliedersuche". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  18. "ProB, Regionalliga und der Unterbau". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  19. "Förderung von Anfang an". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  20. "Verein". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  21. "Zahlen der Stadt Bamberg 2011". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  22. "Freak City, tied for first". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  23. "Fanclub Faszination Basketball Bamberg e.V." Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  24. "Fanclub Freakcity". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  25. "Sektion Südblock". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
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