CB Estudiantes
Spanish basketball club
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Club Baloncesto Estudiantes, S.A.D.,[1] (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.
Spain Cup
(1948)
CB Estudiantes
(1948–present)
| Movistar Estudiantes | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname | Estu, Los del Ramiro (The kids from Ramiro), Dementes (Insanes), Madrid Students (NBA form) | ||
| Leagues | Primera FEB Spain Cup | ||
| Founded | April 1948 | ||
| History | Ramiro de Maeztu (1948) CB Estudiantes (1948–present) | ||
| Arena | Movistar Arena | ||
| Capacity | 17,953 | ||
| Location | Madrid, Spain | ||
| Team colors | Light Blue, Black, White | ||
| Main sponsor | Movistar | ||
| President | Ignacio Triana | ||
| Team manager | Alberto Ortego | ||
| Head coach | Toni Ten | ||
| Team captain | Jayson Granger | ||
| Championships | 3 Spanish Cup 1 Spain Cup 3 Princess' Cup | ||
| Retired numbers | 0 | ||
| Website | www | ||
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Some of its achievements include winning three Spanish Cups and reaching the ACB Finals in 2004. Playing on the courts of said Institute, with a large number of teams of all categories from children to juniors, the club's youth academy has produced many great players and coaches of Spanish basketball throughout its history, such as Alberto Herreros, Nacho Azofra, Aíto García Reneses, José Miguel Antúnez, Jesús Codina, José Sagi-Vela, Gonzalo Sagi-Vela, Fernando Martín, Alfonso Reyes, Felipe Reyes, Carlos Jiménez, Fran Guerra, Sergio Rodríguez, Iñaki de Miguel, Javier Beirán, Pepu Hernández, Carlos Suárez, Darío Brizuela, Jaime Fernández, Daniel Clark, Jayson Granger, Sebas Saiz 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.

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.

In May 1963, Estudiantes won their first trophy, the Spanish Cup, against Real Madrid. In April 1986, after several decades without sporting success, Estudiantes won their first Copa Príncipe de Asturias against Granollers, led by the American forward David Russell. The 1990s and 2000s would be the golden age of the college club. While competing every year in ACB and European competitions, he achieved success and won trophies. 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.[2] 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. The club's irregular sporting situation could have been resolved with more efficient management, but 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 back to the ACB and gradually resolving its financial situation. Even so, during this negative period, Estudiantes has managed to expand their trophy collection, winning the Copa Princesa de Asturias twice more against Granada (2022) and Básquet Coruña (2024). In January 2026, Estudiantes added to its list of achievements once again, winning the newly created competition, the Spain Cup, against Palencia Baloncesto, the host team of the Final Four.
Logos
Sponsorship naming
Along the years CB Estudiantes has had several sponsorship names:
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Home arenas
- 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)[3]
Gallery
- Polideportivo Antonio Magariños, where currently play the women's and the youth teams of the club.
- Internal view of Movistar Arena, the current home arena of the club since 2010.
- Estudiantes time out during a game versus Valencia Basket in November 2005.
- 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.
Rivalries
Estudiantes has a rivalry with Real Madrid. Both teams meet in the Madrid basketball derby (Spanish: Derbi madrileño). Since 2011, 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
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 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Updated: March 8, 2026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Depth chart
Colours: Blue = homegrown player; Red = non–FIBA Europe player
Notable players
José Miguel Antúnez
Víctor Arteaga
Nacho Azofra
Javier Beirán
Darío Brizuela
Jesús Codina
Quino Colom
Rodrigo de la Fuente
Iñaki de Miguel
Antonio Díaz-Miguel
Miguel Estrada
Jaime Fernández
Germán Gabriel
Aíto García Reneses
Fran Guerra
Juancho Hernangómez
Alberto Herreros
Iker Iturbe
Carlos Jiménez
Oriol Junyent
Antonio Martín
Fernando Martín

Jan Martín
Nacho Martín
Juan Antonio Martínez
Javier Mendiburu
Albert Oliver
Juan Antonio Orenga
Xavi Rabaseda
Vicente Ramos
Xavi Rey
Alfonso Reyes
Felipe Reyes
Sergio Rodríguez
Guille Rubio
Gonzalo Sagi-Vela
José Sagi-Vela
Javi Salgado
Carlos Suárez
Rafael Vecina
Édgar Vicedo
Patricio Garino
Pancho Jasen
Nicolás Laprovíttola
Federico Van Lacke

Sylven Landesberg
Nik Caner-Medley
Yannick Driesen
John Roberson
Lucas Nogueira
Caio Torres
Dejan Ivanov
Carl English
Levon Kendall
Philip Scrubb
Nacho Arroyo
Hansel Atencia
Juan Palacios
Junior Etou
Marko Banić
Danko Cvjetičanin
Željko Šakić
Goran Suton
Ondřej Balvín
Jiří Welsch
Kevin Larsen
Josh Asselin
Ángel Delgado
Luis Flores
Alex Murphy
Sasu Salin
Jamar Wilson
Tariq Kirksay
Edwin Jackson
Michel Morandais
Florent Piétrus
Ali Traoré
Tyrone Ellis
Viktor Sanikidze
Pietro Aradori
Alessandro Gentile
Mārtiņš Laksa
Toms Leimanis
Dovydas Giedraitis
Shayne Whittington
Omar Cook
Nemanja Đurišić
Goran Nikolić
Nicolas de Jong
Torgeir Bryn
Karamo Jawara
Rubén Garcés
J. J. Barea
Gian Clavell
Mikhail Mikhailov
Sitapha Savané
Aleksa Avramović
Stefan Birčević
Aleksandar Cvetković
Nemanja Dangubić
Nikola Lončar
Petar Popović
Vladimir Štimac
Domen Lorbek
Uroš Slokar
Samo Udrih
Martin Rančík
Ludvig Håkanson
Daniel Clark
Vitaly Potapenko
Jayson Granger
Michael Carrera
Gary Alexander
Corey Brewer
Alec Brown
Louis Bullock
Vonteego Cummings
Johnny Dee
Toney Douglas
Marlon Garnett
Keith Jennings
Adam Keefe
Kyle Kuric
Chris Lofton
Will McDonald
Tony Mitchell
Andrae Patterson
John Pinone
Phil Pressey
David Russell
Walker Russell
Cedric Simmons
Terry Stotts
Ron Taylor
Shaun Vandiver
Glen Whisby
Eric White
Harper Williams
Rickie Winslow
Antoine Wright
Head coach
Rafael Laborde: 1948–1949, 1953–1955, 1956
Miguel Parrilla: 1949–1951
Leopoldo Bermúdez: 1951–1953
Víctor Díaz: 1955–1956
Héctor Rodríguez: 1956 (int.)
José Antonio Garrido: 1956–1957
Roberto Bermúdez: 1957, 1959–1960, 1974–1975
Emilio Tejada: 1957–1958
Ramón Uturbi: 1958–1959
Jaime Bolea: 1960–1963
Jesús Codina: 1963–1964, 1973–1974, 1979–1981
Francisco Hernández: 1964–1965
Ignacio Pinedo: 1965–1973
Fernando Bermúdez: 1975–1976
José Ramón Ramos: 1976–1979
Fernando Martínez Arroyo: 1979
Antonio Gómez Carra: 1981–1983
Paco Garrido: 1983–1988
Miguel Ángel Martín: 1988–1994
Pepu Hernández: 1994–2001, 2001–2005, 2011–2012
Charly Sáinz de Aja: 2001
Juan Antonio Orenga: 2005–2006
Pedro Martínez: 2006–2007
Mariano de Pablos: 2007
Javier Carlos González: 2007 (int.)
Velimir Perasović: 2007–2008
Luis Casimiro: 2008–2011
Trifón Poch: 2012
Txus Vidorreta: 2012–2015
Diego Ocampo: 2015–2016
Alberto Lorenzo: 2016 (int.), 2023
Sergio Valdeolmillos: 2016
Salva Maldonado: 2016–2018
Josep Maria Berrocal: 2018–2019
Aleksandar Džikić: 2019–2020
Javier Zamora: 2020–2021
Jota Cuspinera: 2021–2022
Diego Epifanio: 2022
Javi Rodríguez: 2022–2023
Pedro Rivero: 2023–2025
Natxo Lezkano: 2025
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
- Remained in ACB due to the resign of CB Canarias to promote.
- Remained in ACB due to the resign of Palencia Baloncesto to promote.
- Season curtailed due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Honours
Domestic competitions
- Copa del Rey de Baloncesto (Spanish King's Cup)
- Winners (1): 2025–26
- Copa Princesa de Asturias (Spanish Princess' Cup) (defunct)
European competitions
- FIBA Saporta Cup (defunct)
- FIBA Korać Cup (defunct)
- Runners-up (1): 1998–99
- FIBA EuroChallenge (defunct)
Other competitions
- FIBA International Christmas Tournament (defunct)
- 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
- Juan Antonio Orenga – 1991
- John Pinone – 1992
- Alfonso Reyes – 2000
- Sergio Rodríguez – 2005
- Carlos Suárez – 2006
- Juancho Hernangómez – 2016
- David Russell – 1986, 1987
- Rickie Winslow – 1990
- Chandler Thompson – 1996, 1998
ACB Three Point Shootout Champion
- Danko Cvjetičanin – 1993
- Keith Jennings – 1996
- Carlos Jiménez – 2006
- Carlos Suárez – 2010
- Nik Caner-Medley – 2011
- Edwin Jackson – 2017
- Sylven Landesberg – 2018
- David Russell – 1986
- Álex Urtasun – 2022
- Alec Wintering – 2024
- Lotanna Nwogbo – 2026
Matches against NBA teams
Gold and Diamond Badge
The Gold and Diamond Badge of Club Estudiantes[4] is the highest honor bestowed by the sports organization. It is characterized as a piece of jewelry that represents the club's shield in gold, adorned with diamonds, symbolizing excellence, commitment and a long association with the entity. It is an exclusive symbol awarded to people who have made an exceptional contribution to its history, values or functioning, including presidents, historical players or important people for their career and institutional or social support. Currently, fifteen people have received the distinction in the club's more than 75-year history:
Presidets of the club
- 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)
Institutional
- Francisco González, chairman of Argentaria
- Alberto Toledano, CEO and managing director of Asefa
- César Alierta, CEO and chairman of Telefónica
- Luis Miguel Gilpérez, chairman of Telefónica
Sports
- Juan Antonio Martínez Arroyo, player (1961–1975)
- José Sagi-Vela, player (1963–1969, 1974–1977)
- John Pinone, player (1984–1993)
- Pepu Hernández, head coach (1994–2001, 2001–2005, 2011–2012)
Social
- Manolo Cavido, prop man and team manager
- Petra Guzmán, prop woman, waitress and cleaning woman of the Instituto Ramiro de Maeztu
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.[5] 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 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Updated: January 28, 2026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Season by season
| Season | Tier | Division | Pos. | Copa de la Reina | European competitions | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000–01 | 2 | 1ª División | 2nd[a] | ||||
| 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 [b] | ||||
| 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 |
| 2025–26 | 1 | Liga Femenina | 2 EuroCup Women | QF | 8–4 | ||