CB Estudiantes

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Movistar Estudiantes
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NicknameEstu, Los del Ramiro (The kids from Ramiro), Dementes (Insanes), Madrid Students (NBA form)
LeaguesPrimera FEB
Spain Cup
FoundedApril 1948; 77 years ago (1948-04)
HistoryRamiro de Maeztu
(1948)
CB Estudiantes
(1948–present)
ArenaMovistar Arena
Capacity17,953
LocationMadrid, Spain
Team colorsLight Blue, Black, White
     
Main sponsorMovistar
PresidentIgnacio Triana
Team managerAlberto Ortego
Head coachToni Ten
Team captainJayson Granger
Championships3 Spanish Cup
3 Princess' Cup
Websitewww.movistarestudiantes.com
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Home
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Third

Club Baloncesto Estudiantes, S.A.D., (English: Club Basketball Students) known simply as Estu and as Movistar Estudiantes for sponsorship reasons, is a basketball team based in the city of Madrid, Spain. It is a member of the Asociación de Clubes de Baloncesto (ACB). Founded in 1948, it is one of the most recognized basketball teams in Spain.

Some of its achievements include winning three Spanish Cups and reaching the ACB Finals in 2004. The club is also particularly famous for its renowned youth programme that has produced many Spanish talents over the years such as Alberto Herreros, Nacho Azofra, Aíto García Reneses, Fernando Martín, Alfonso Reyes, Felipe Reyes, Carlos Jiménez, Sergio Rodríguez, Iñaki de Miguel, Pepu Hernández or Juancho Hernangómez.

History

]

The club Estudiantes was founded in April 1948 by a group of students (the "Estudiantes") of a public preparatory school (the Instituto Ramiro de Maeztu, IRM) in Madrid to form a team to practice sport during the school recesses. Mr. Antonio Magariños, Professor of Latin and head of studies of the high school, was the first president of the club. It held the position until 1964. From 1949 it has played in the maximum category of the Spanish basketball.

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Instituto Ramiro de Maeztu (Madrid), where Estudiantes was born.

By the time when the first Spanish-wide season-long championship was organized in 1955, by the Spanish Basketball Association (FEB), it was one of the six clubs participating in that tournament, as the second best team from the Province of Madrid (the first being Real Madrid). Until 2021, it had always participated in the premier Spanish basketball league along with Real Madrid and Joventut. It was also one of two only Spanish basketball clubs with teams both at the top male and female Spanish championships.

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Fountain of Dolphins (Madrid), where the Estudiantes's fans celebrate the team's trophies.

In May 1963, Estudiantes won their first trophy, the Spanish Cup, against Real Madrid. In April 1992, a month after winning his second Spanish Cup against CAI Zaragoza, Estudiantes reached the 1992 EuroLeague Final Four in Istanbul, finishing in 4th place. It was his Annus mirabilis. In March 1999, the team played his only European final, in the 1998–99 Korać Cup, by defeated by FC Barcelona. In January 2000, Estu won his third Spanish Cup against Valencia, the last one until today. In the 2003–04 ACB season, it reached the Spanish ACB League finals, where they could not win against FC Barcelona.

In May 2012, after several irregular seasons, marked by a bad economic situation, Estudiantes was relegated for the first time in its history from the top tier of Spanish basketball, but remained in the league because LEB Oro champion CB 1939 Canarias didn't present the required documentation and money. In May 2016, again, the team was relegated, but remained in the ACB because champion Palencia Baloncesto didn't present the required documentation and money. Finally, after several relatively stable years, the team's relegation was completed during the coronavirus pandemic in May 2021. Since then, Estu remains in LEB Oro, fighting for promotion and returning to the ACB.

Logos

]

Sponsorship naming

]
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Polideportivo Antonio Magariños, where currently play the women's and the youth teams of the club.

Along the years CB Estudiantes has had several sponsorship names:

  • No sponsorship name: 1948-1971
  • Estudiantes Monteverde: 1971–1977
  • No sponsorship name: 1977–1978
  • Estudiantes Mudespa: 1978–1981
  • Estudiantes Caja Postal: 1981–1987, 1989–1992
  • Estudiantes Todagrés: 1987–1988
  • Estudiantes Bose: 1988–1989
   
  • Estudiantes Argentaria: 1992–1997
  • No sponsorship name: 1997–1998
  • Adecco Estudiantes: 1998–2006
  • MMT Estudiantes: 2006–2009
  • Asefa Estudiantes: 2009–2013
  • Tuenti Móvil Estudiantes: 2013–2014
  • Movistar Estudiantes: 2014–present

Home arenas

]
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Internal view of Movistar Arena, the current home arena of the club since 2010.
  • La Nevera (The IRM Arena): (1948–71)
  • Polideportivo Antonio Magariños: (1971–87)
  • Palacio Vistalegre: (2001–2005)
  • Madrid Arena: (2005–2010)
  • Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid: (1987–2001, 2010–present)
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Nacho Azofra is the player with the most appearances in the club's history, and product of youth academy.

Rivalries

]

Estudiantes has a rivalry with Real Madrid. Both teams meet in the Madrid basketball derby (Spanish: Derbi madrileño). Both teams currently share their home arena, the Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid.

Until 2021, Estudiantes and Real Madrid, along with Joventut, were the only teams that had played all the seasons in the top tier. However, Estudiantes was relegated to LEB Oro after finishing 18th in the 2020–21 ACB season.

Players

]
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Estudiantes time out during a game versus Valencia Basket in November 2005.
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2010–11 season players (from left to right): Nik Caner-Medley, Jiří Welsch, Albert Oliver, Germán Gabriel, Sergio Sánchez, Josh Asselin, Marc Blanch, Yannick Driesen, Jayson Granger, Daniel Clark, Tyrone Ellis, Pancho Jasen, Jaime Fernández.

Basketball Hall of Famers

]
  • Antonio Díaz-Miguel, F, 1950–1952, 1953–1958, Inducted 1997

Current roster

]

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

CB Estudiantes roster
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Nat. Name Ht. Age
PF 1 image González, Asier 2.02 m (6 ft 8 in) 25 – (2000-04-20)20 April 2000
C 2 image Brimah, Amida 2.08 m (6 ft 10 in) 31 – (1994-02-11)11 February 1994
SF 6 image image Giovanetti, Lucas 2.01 m (6 ft 7 in) 20 – (2005-06-14)14 June 2005
PG 8 image Filipović, Goran 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) 28 – (1996-11-26)26 November 1996
SG 9 image Salin, Sasu 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) 34 – (1991-06-11)11 June 1991
PG 11 image image Granger, Jayson (C) 1.89 m (6 ft 2 in) 36 – (1989-09-15)15 September 1989
PF 15 image McGrew, Tanner 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 32 – (1993-07-12)12 July 1993
SG 18 image Sola, Miguel 1.89 m (6 ft 2 in) 19 – (2006-10-30)30 October 2006
PF 19 image López, Hugo 2.05 m (6 ft 9 in) 22 – (2003-07-05)5 July 2003
SF 22 image image Vaulet, Juan Pablo 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 29 – (1996-03-22)22 March 1996
C 24 image image Nwogbo, Lotanna 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 32 – (1993-05-30)30 May 1993
SF 29 image image Garino, Patricio 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) 32 – (1993-05-17)17 May 1993
SG 51 image Silverio, Omar 1.92 m (6 ft 4 in) 26 – (1998-11-05)5 November 1998
Head coach
    Assistant coach(es)
      Athletic trainer(s)
        Physiotherapist(s)
        • image Óscar Otín
        Team manager

          Legend
          • (C) Team captain
          • image Injured

          • Roster
          Updated: October 12, 2025

          Depth chart

          ]
          Pos. Starting 5 Bench 1 Bench 2
          C Lotanna Nwogbo Amida Brimah
          PF Tanner McGrew Asier González Hugo López
          SF Patricio Garino Juan Pablo Vaulet Lucas Giovannetti
          SG Omar Silverio Sasu Salin Miguel Sola
          PG Jayson Granger Goran Filipović

          Colours: Blue = homegrown player; Red = non–FIBA Europe player

          Notable players

          ]
          • image José Miguel Antúnez
          • image Víctor Arteaga
          • image Nacho Azofra
          • image Javier Beirán
          • image Darío Brizuela
          • image Jesús Codina
          • imageimage Quino Colom
          • image Rodrigo de la Fuente
          • image Iñaki de Miguel
          • image Antonio Díaz-Miguel
          • image Miguel Estrada
          • image Jaime Fernández
          • imageimage Germán Gabriel
          • image Aíto García Reneses
          • image Fran Guerra
          • image Juancho Hernangómez
          • image Alberto Herreros
          • image Iker Iturbe
          • image Carlos Jiménez
          • image Oriol Junyent
          • image Antonio Martín
          • image Fernando Martín
          • image Nacho Martín
          • image Juan Antonio Martínez
          • image Javier Mendiburu
          • image Albert Oliver
          • image Juan Antonio Orenga
          • image Xavi Rabaseda
          • image Vicente Ramos
          • image Xavi Rey
          • image Alfonso Reyes
          • image Felipe Reyes
          • image Sergio Rodríguez
          • image Guille Rubio
          • image Gonzalo Sagi-Vela
          • image José Sagi-Vela
          • image Javi Salgado
          • image Carlos Suárez
          • image Rafael Vecina
          • image Édgar Vicedo
          • imageimage Patricio Garino
          • imageimage Pancho Jasen
          • imageimage Nicolás Laprovíttola
          • imageimage Federico Van Lacke
          • imageimageimage Sylven Landesberg
          • imageimage Nik Caner-Medley
          • image Yannick Driesen
          • imageimageJohn Roberson
          • image Lucas Nogueira
          • image Caio Torres
          • image Dejan Ivanov
          • image Carl English
          • imageimage Levon Kendall
          • imageimage Philip Scrubb
          • image Nacho Arroyo
          • imageimage Hansel Atencia
          • imageimage Juan Palacios
          • image Junior Etou
          • image Marko Banić
          • image Danko Cvjetičanin
          • image Željko Šakić
          • imageimage Goran Suton
          • image Ondřej Balvín
          • image Jiří Welsch
          • image Kevin Larsen
          • imageimage Josh Asselin
          • image Ángel Delgado
          • imageimage Luis Flores
          • imageimage Alex Murphy
          • image Sasu Salin
          • imageimage Jamar Wilson
          • imageimage Tariq Kirksay
          • image Edwin Jackson
          • image Michel Morandais
          • image Florent Piétrus
          • image Ali Traoré
          • imageimage Tyrone Ellis
          • image Viktor Sanikidze
          • image Pietro Aradori
          • image Alessandro Gentile
          • image Mārtiņš Laksa
          • image Toms Leimanis
          • image Dovydas Giedraitis
          • imageimage Shayne Whittington
          • imageimage Omar Cook
          • image Nemanja Đurišić
          • image Goran Nikolić
          • imageimage Nicolas de Jong
          • image Torgeir Bryn
          • image Karamo Jawara
          • imageimage Rubén Garcés
          • image J. J. Barea
          • image Gian Clavell
          • image Mikhail Mikhailov
          • imageimage Sitapha Savané
          • image Aleksa Avramović
          • image Stefan Birčević
          • image Aleksandar Cvetković
          • image Nemanja Dangubić
          • imageimage Nikola Lončar
          • image Petar Popović
          • image Vladimir Štimac
          • image Domen Lorbek
          • image Uroš Slokar
          • image Samo Udrih
          • image Martin Rančík
          • image Ludvig Håkanson
          • image Daniel Clark
          • image Vitaly Potapenko
          • imageimage Jayson Granger
          • image Michael Carrera
          • image Gary Alexander
          • image Corey Brewer
          • image Alec Brown
          • image Louis Bullock
          • image Vonteego Cummings
          • image Johnny Dee
          • image Toney Douglas
          • imageimage Marlon Garnett
          • image Keith Jennings
          • image Adam Keefe
          • imageimage Kyle Kuric
          • image Chris Lofton
          • image Will McDonald
          • image Tony Mitchell
          • image Andrae Patterson
          • image John Pinone
          • image Phil Pressey
          • image David Russell
          • image Walker Russell
          • imageimage Cedric Simmons
          • image Terry Stotts
          • image Ron Taylor
          • image Shaun Vandiver
          • image Glen Whisby
          • image Eric White
          • image Harper Williams
          • image Rickie Winslow
          • image Antoine Wright

          Head coach

          ]
          • image Rafael Laborde: 1948–1949, 1953–1955, 1956
          • image Miguel Parrilla: 1949–1951
          • image Leopoldo Bermúdez: 1951–1953
          • image Víctor Díaz: 1955–1956
          • image Héctor Rodríguez: 1956 (int.)
          • image José Antonio Garrido: 1956–1957
          • image Roberto Bermúdez: 1957, 1959–1960, 1974–1975
          • image Emilio Tejada: 1957–1958
          • image Ramón Uturbi: 1958–1959
          • image Jaime Bolea: 1960–1963
          • image Jesús Codina: 1963–1964, 1973–1974, 1979–1981
          • image Francisco Hernández: 1964–1965
          • image Ignacio Pinedo: 1965–1973
          • image Fernando Bermúdez: 1975–1976
          • image José Ramón Ramos: 1976–1979
          • image Fernando Martínez Arroyo: 1979
          • image Antonio Gómez Carra: 1981–1983
          • image Paco Garrido: 1983–1988
          • image Miguel Ángel Martín: 1988–1994
          • image Pepu Hernández: 1994–2001, 2001–2005, 2011–2012
          • image Charly Sáinz de Aja: 2001
          • image Juan Antonio Orenga: 2005–2006
          • image Pedro Martínez: 2006–2007
          • image Mariano de Pablos: 2007
          • image image Javier Carlos González: 2007 (int.)
          • image Velimir Perasović: 2007–2008
          • image Luis Casimiro: 2008–2011
          • image Trifón Poch: 2012
          • image Txus Vidorreta: 2012–2015
          • image Diego Ocampo: 2015–2016
          • image Alberto Lorenzo: 2016 (int.), 2023
          • image Sergio Valdeolmillos: 2016
          • image Salva Maldonado: 2016–2018
          • image Josep Maria Berrocal: 2018–2019
          • image Aleksandar Džikić: 2019–2020
          • image Javier Zamora: 2020–2021
          • image Jota Cuspinera: 2021–2022
          • image Diego Epifanio: 2022
          • image Javi Rodríguez: 2022–2023
          • image Pedro Rivero: 2023–2025
          • image Natxo Lezkano: 2025
          • image Toni Ten: 2025–present

          Presidents

          ]
          • Antonio Magariños: 1948–1964
          • Anselmo López: 1964 (int.)
          • José Hermida: 1964–1971
          • Pedro Dellmans: 1971–1983
          • Juan Francisco Moneo: 1983–1998
          • Alejandro González Varona: 1998–2004
          • Juan Francisco García: 2004–2005, 2008–2014
          • Fernando Bermúdez: 2005–2008
          • Javier Tejedor: 2008
          • Fernando Galindo: 2014–2022
          • Ignacio Triana: 2022–present

          Season by season

          ]
          Season Tier Division Pos. W–L Copa del Rey Other cups European competitions
          1957 1 1ª División 5th 3–7
          1958 1 1ª División 5th 11–1–6
          1958–59 1 1ª División 6th 12–2–8 Quarterfinalist
          1959–60 1 1ª División 10th 6–2–14 Round of 16
          1960–61 1 1ª División 7th 10–2–10 First round
          1961–62 1 1ª División 3rd 10–8 Runner-up
          1962–63 1 1ª División 2nd 11–5 Champion
          1963–64 1 1ª División 5th 13–9 Semifinalist
          1964–65 1 1ª División 4th 6–8
          1965–66 1 1ª División 6th 8–10 Semifinalist
          1966–67 1 1ª División 3rd 14–6 Semifinalist
          1967–68 1 1ª División 2nd 16–4 Semifinalist
          1968–69 1 1ª División 5th 12–10 Quarterfinalist
          1969–70 1 1ª División 5th 11–1–10 Quarterfinalist
          1970–71 1 1ª División 8th 8–14 Round of 16
          1971–72 1 1ª División 5th 12–10 Semifinalist
          1972–73 1 1ª División 4th 17–1–12 Runner-up
          1973–74 1 1ª División 4th 17–2–9 Semifinalist 2 Cup Winners' Cup SF 5–4
          1974–75 1 1ª División 7th 8–14 Runner-up
          1975–76 1 1ª División 4th 17–15 Semifinalist 2 Cup Winners' Cup SF 6–1
          1976–77 1 1ª División 6th 10–12 Semifinalist
          1977–78 1 1ª División 7th 8–1–13 Semifinalist
          1978–79 1 1ª División 4th 13–1–8 Quarterfinalist
          1979–80 1 1ª División 8th 9–1–12 Round of 16
          1980–81 1 1ª División 2nd 18–2–6 Quarterfinalist
          1981–82 1 1ª División 11th 10–1–15 Round of 16
          1982–83 1 1ª División 10th 8–1–17 Round of 16
          1983–84 1 Liga ACB 13th 14–16
          1984–85 1 Liga ACB 7th 20–13 Copa Asociación SF
          1985–86 1 Liga ACB 5th 17–15 Copa Príncipe C
          1986–87 1 Liga ACB 5th 16–17 Quarterfinalist Copa Príncipe R16 3 Korać Cup QF 5–3
          1987–88 1 Liga ACB 5th 18–14 Quarterfinalist Copa Príncipe QF 3 Korać Cup QF 3–5
          1988–89 1 Liga ACB 10th 20–19 Quarterfinalist 3 Korać Cup QF 4–6
          1989–90 1 Liga ACB 4th 22–19 Round of 16
          1990–91 1 Liga ACB 3rd 30–12 Runner-up 3 Korać Cup QF 8–4
          1991–92 1 Liga ACB 3rd 30–13 Champion 1 European League 4th 14–7
          1992–93 1 Liga ACB 4th 27–14 Quarterfinalist 1 European League GS 6–10
          1993–94 1 Liga ACB 4th 22–16 Fourth position 3 Korać Cup GS 4–4
          1994–95 1 Liga ACB 7th 20–20 Third position 3 Korać Cup GS 5–5
          1995–96 1 Liga ACB 3rd 29–16 3 Korać Cup GS 6–4
          1996–97 1 Liga ACB 3rd 25–17 Quarterfinalist 1 EuroLeague R16 9–7
          1997–98 1 Liga ACB 5th 25–13 Quarterfinalist 1 EuroLeague R16 8–10
          1998–99 1 Liga ACB 4th 24–17 3 Korać Cup RU 14–2
          1999–00 1 Liga ACB 3rd 28–14 Champion 3 Korać Cup SF 11–3
          2000–01 1 Liga ACB 6th 22–16 Quarterfinalist 1 Euroleague R16 4–8
          2001–02 1 Liga ACB 4th 23–19 Semifinalist 2 Saporta Cup R16 6–6
          2002–03 1 Liga ACB 4th 27–14 Quarterfinalist 2 ULEB Cup SF 11–5
          2003–04 1 Liga ACB 2nd 28–20 Quarterfinalist 2 ULEB Cup SF 11–5
          2004–05 1 Liga ACB 4th 25–17 Quarterfinalist 1 Euroleague RS 4–10
          2005–06 1 Liga ACB 8th 17–20 2 ULEB Cup RS 4–6
          2006–07 1 Liga ACB 9th 16–18 3 FIBA EuroCup 4th 12–4
          2007–08 1 Liga ACB 14th 12–22
          2008–09 1 Liga ACB 13th 12–22 Semifinalist
          2009–10 1 Liga ACB 7th 19–17 Quarterfinalist
          2010–11 1 Liga ACB 12th 16–18 2 Eurocup QF 8–6
          2011–12 1 Liga ACB 17th 11–23
          2012–13 1 Liga ACB 12th 15–19 Quarterfinalist
          2013–14 1 Liga ACB 16th 12–22
          2014–15 1 Liga ACB 13th 14–20
          2015–16 1 Liga ACB 17th 9–25
          2016–17 1 Liga ACB 11th 13–19
          2017–18 1 Liga ACB 11th 17–17 3 Champions League RS 9–1–6
          2018–19 1 Liga ACB 16th 11–23 Quarterfinalist 3 Champions League QR2 2–2
          2019–20 1 Liga ACB 18th 5–18
          2020–21 1 Liga ACB 18th 9–27
          2021–22 2 LEB Oro 3rd 29–11 Copa Princesa C
          2022–23 2 LEB Oro 7th 22–15
          2023–24 2 LEB Oro 3rd 29–12 Copa Princesa C
          2024–25 2 Primera FEB 4th 29–9 Spain Cup QF
          1. Remained in ACB due to the resign of CB Canarias to promote.
          2. Remained in ACB due to the resign of Palencia Baloncesto to promote.
          3. Season curtailed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

          Honours

          ]

          Domestic competitions

          ]
          • Liga ACB
          Runners-up (4): 1962–63, 1967–68, 1980–81, 2003–04
          • Copa del Rey de Baloncesto (Spanish King's Cup)
          Winners (3): 1963, 1992, 2000
          Runners-up (4): 1962, 1973, 1975, 1991
          • Copa Princesa de Asturias (Spanish Princess' Cup) (defunct)
          Winners (3): 1986, 2022, 2024

          European competitions

          ]
          • EuroLeague
          4th place (1): 1991–92
          Final Four (1): 1992
          • FIBA Saporta Cup (defunct)
          Semifinalists (2): 1973–74, 1975–76
          • FIBA Korać Cup (defunct)
          Runners-up (1): 1998–99
          • EuroCup Basketball
          Semifinalists (2): 2002–03, 2003–04
          • FIBA EuroChallenge (defunct)
          4th place (1): 2006–07
          Final Four (1): 2007

          Other competitions

          ]
          • FIBA International Christmas Tournament (defunct)
          Winners (1):1992
          4th place (4): 1972, 1974, 1975, 1993
          • Torneo Comunidad de Madrid (defunct)
          Winners (8): 1988, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003
          • Albacete, Spain Invitational Game
          Winners (1): 2014
          • Torneo Ciudad de Getafe
          Winners (1): 2019

          Individual awards

          ]

          Spanish Cup MVP

          • Juan Antonio Orenga – 1991
          • John Pinone – 1992
          • Alfonso Reyes – 2000

          ACB Rising Star

          • Sergio Rodríguez – 2005
          • Carlos Suárez – 2006
          • Juancho Hernangómez – 2016

          ACB Slam Dunk Champion

          • David Russell – 1986, 1987
          • Rickie Winslow – 1990
          • Chandler Thompson – 1996, 1998

          ACB Three Point Shootout Champion

          • Danko Cvjetičanin – 1993
          • Keith Jennings – 1996

          All-ACB First Team

          • Carlos Jiménez – 2006
          • Carlos Suárez – 2010
          • Nik Caner-Medley – 2011
          • Edwin Jackson – 2017
          • Sylven Landesberg – 2018

          Spanish Princess' Cup MVP

          • David Russell – 1986
          • Álex Urtasun – 2022
          • Alec Wintering – 2024

          Women's team

          ]

          CB Estudiantes has also a women's team which was founded in 1989 and played during several seasons in Liga Femenina, the Spanish women's basketball top tier. It currently plays in Liga Femenina.

          Current roster

          ]

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

          CB Estudiantes roster
          Players Coaches
          Pos. No. Nat. Name Ht. Age
          F 0 image Bühner, Frieda 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in) 21 – (2004-05-28)28 May 2004
          SG 1 image Berkani, Lisa 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in) 28 – (1997-05-19)19 May 1997
          PG 4 image Stanaćev, Aleksandra 1.67 m (5 ft 6 in) 31 – (1994-09-25)25 September 1994
          PG 5 image Latorre, Isa 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) 29 – (1996-03-22)22 March 1996
          SG 7 image Samson, Clémentine 1.81 m (5 ft 11 in) 34 – (1991-09-19)19 September 1991
          SF 8 image Etxarri, Irati 1.89 m (6 ft 2 in) 27 – (1998-07-26)26 July 1998
          SF 11 image Jespersen, Maria 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) 31 – (1994-01-06)6 January 1994
          C 15 image Díaz, Adriana 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) 17 – (2008-04-09)9 April 2008
          SF 16 image Osma, Carla 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in) 19 – (2006-08-14)14 August 2006
          PG 18 image Toribio, Ada 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in) 17 – (2008-02-18)18 February 2008
          SF 19 image Topuzović, Kristina 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) 31 – (1994-08-23)23 August 1994
          SF 22 image Camilión, Juana 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in) 26 – (1999-03-22)22 March 1999
          C 33 image Ezeigbo, Nneka 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) 27 – (1998-10-01)1 October 1998
          SF 99 image Odom, Leaonna 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) 27 – (1998-03-26)26 March 1998
          Head coach
          • image Antonio Pernas
          Assistant coach(es)
          • image Olmo Gómez
          Athletic trainer(s)
            Physiotherapist(s)
              Team manager

                Legend
                • (C) Team captain
                • image Injured

                • Roster
                Updated: October 21, 2025

                Season by season

                ]
                Season Tier Division Pos. Copa de la Reina European competitions
                2000–01 2 1ª División 2nd
                2001–02 2 Liga Femenina 2 2nd
                2002–03 1 Liga Femenina 10th
                2003–04 1 Liga Femenina 7th
                2004–05 1 Liga Femenina 7th Quarterfinalist
                2005–06 1 Liga Femenina 8th
                2006–07 1 Liga Femenina 13th
                2007–08 2 Liga Femenina 2 3rd
                2008–09 1 Liga Femenina 12th
                2009–10 1 Liga Femenina 13th
                2010–11 2 Liga Femenina 2 4th
                2011–12 2 Liga Femenina 2 9th
                2012–13 2 Liga Femenina 2 7th
                2013–14 2 Liga Femenina 2 6th
                2014–15 2 Liga Femenina 2 8th
                2015–16 2 Liga Femenina 2 8th
                2016–17 2 Liga Femenina 2 2nd
                2017–18 1 Liga Femenina 14th
                2018–19 2 Liga Femenina 2 10th
                2019–20 2 Liga Femenina 2 1st
                2020–21 1 Liga Femenina 5th
                2021–22 1 Liga Femenina 7th Quarterfinalist 2 EuroCup Women PR1 4–4
                2022–23 1 Liga Femenina 8th Quarterfinalist 2 EuroCup Women PR1 3–5
                2023–24 1 Liga Femenina 6th Semifinalist 2 EuroCup Women PR1 6–2
                2024–25 1 Liga Femenina 6th Quarterfinalist 2 EuroCup Women R16 6–1–3
                1. Invited to join the newly created Liga Femenina 2.
                2. Liga Femenina 2 season 19/20 curtailed due to coronavirus

                References

                ]
                1. "SADs at CSD website". Archived from the original on 2017-04-02. Retrieved 2015-04-04.
                2. Comunicado oficial Asefa Estudiantes ACB.com, 15 June 2012
                3. "Asefa Estudiantes will play the next season in the Palacio de Deportes" (in Spanish). 24 August 2010. Archived from the original on 25 June 2013. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
                4. History of the women's basketball team at Estudiantes website (in Spanish)
                5. "Competiciones FEB".
                ]
                • Official website (in Spanish)

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