Brazilian Basketball Confederation

Governing body of basketball in Brazil From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Brazilian Basketball Confederation (Portuguese: Confederação Brasileira de Basketball, CBB), also known as Basketball Brazil (Portuguese: Basquete Brasil), is the governing body of basketball in Brazil. The confederation represents Brazil in FIBA and FIBA Americas competitions. It organizes and oversees the Men's National Basketball Team and the Women's National Basketball Team. Since 2017, former national basketball player Guy Peixoto is the president. CBB contains 720 registered clubs, 36,000 licensed female players, 96,000 licensed male players, and 42,000 unlicensed players.

JurisdictionBrazil
AbbreviationCBB
Founded25 October 1933; 92 years ago (1933-10-25)
Quick facts Sport, Jurisdiction ...
Brazil Basketball Confederation
Confederação Brasileira de Basketball
SportBasketball
JurisdictionBrazil
AbbreviationCBB
Founded25 October 1933; 92 years ago (1933-10-25)
AffiliationFIBA
Affiliation dateFIBA: 18 June 1935; 90 years ago (1935-06-18)
FIBA Americas: 11 October 1975; 50 years ago (1975-10-11)
Regional affiliationFIBA Americas
HeadquartersRio de Janeiro
LocationAvenida Salvador Allende
PresidentGuy Rodrigues Peixoto Júnior [1]
CEORicardo Avelino Trade[1]
Vice presidentMaria Paula Gonçalves da Silva[1]
DirectorMarcelo Corrêa Sousa[1]
SecretaryCarlos Roberto da Costa Fontenelle[1]
Official website
www.cbb.com.br
Brazil
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The senior men's Brazilian national basketball team, which is governed by the CBB, is currently ranked number 11 in the world by FIBA.

History

The logo used from 2017 to 2025.

The CBB has been affiliated with FIBA since 1935. It previously ran the original top-tier level men's professional basketball league in Brazil, the Campeonato Brasileiro de Basquete (Brazilian Basketball Championship).

Presidents

  • 1934 / 1938 - Gerdal Gonzaga Boscoli
  • 1938 / 1975 - Paulo Martins Meira
  • 1975 / 1983 - Alberto Curi
  • 1983 / 1989 - Carlos de Oliveira Dias
  • 1989 / 1997 - Renato Miguel Gaia Brito Cunha
  • 1997 / 2001 - Gerasime Nicolas Bozikis
  • 2001 / 2005 - Gerasime Nicolas Bozikis
  • 2005 / 2009 - Gerasime Nicolas Bozikis
  • 2009 / 2013 - Carlos Boaventura Correa Nunes

Olympics

Updated until 2024 Summer Olympics

See also

References

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