CB Ademar León

Abanca Ademar León is a Spanish handball team based in León, Spain. It plays in Liga ASOBAL.

Location of Ademar León
León
León
Location of Ademar León
Abanca Ademar León
Full nameClub Balonmano Abanca Ademar León
Nickname(s)Maristas, Ademaristas, Leones, Blancos
Founded1956 (1956)
ArenaPalacio de los Deportes de León, León
Capacity5,188
PresidentCayetano Franco
Head coachDani Gordo
LeagueLiga ASOBAL
2022–237th
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away
Website
Official site

History

Founded in 1956, Ademar León is the handball team of the city of León. Until 1975 it played in the provincial categories when not existing economic availability to be able to promotion. In that year the team promoted to 1ª División Nacional (being player of the team the currently chairman, Juan Arias). Its 6th place in 1995–96 allowed the club to play for the first time in its history a European competition (EHF City Cup). In 1996–97 Runner-up of Liga ASOBAL, and runner-up of ASOBAL Cup was able to proclaim itself, being third in the Copa del Rey and obtaining seat to play the EHF Champions League in the following season. In its home country, the club became champion a total of 1 time (2001) and won the Copa del Rey once (2002), the ASOBAL Cup twice (1999, 2009). The club won 2 international cups: EHF Cup Winner's Cup in 1999 and 2005.

Crest, colours, supporters

Kit manufacturers

Period Kit manufacturer
- 2014 Spain Rasán
2014 - 2017 Denmark Hummel
2017 - present Italy Kappa

Kits

Sports Hall information

Ademar León teambus 2018

Management

Position Name
President Spain Cayetano Franco
Vice President Spain René Mira Rubio
Economic Vice President Spain Rocio García Gimeno
Sports Vice President Spain Jose Carlos Cabero Amez

Team

Current squad

Squad for the 2022–23 season[1]
Ademar León

Technical staff

  • Head coach: Spain Manolo Cadenas
  • Assistant coach: Spain Luis Puertas Castrillo
  • Physiotherapist: Spain Jorge Fernández Cabezón

Transfers

Transfers for the 2023–24 season

Previous Squads

Season by season

Season Tier Division Pos. Notes
1980–81 2 1ª Div. Nacional 2nd
1981–82 2 1ª Div. Nacional 1st Promoted
1982–83 1 Div. Honor 13th Relegated
1983–84 2 1ª Div. Nacional 2nd
1984–85 2 1ª Div. Nacional 1st Promoted
1985–86 1 Div. Honor 12th Relegated
1986–87 2 1ª Div. Nacional 7th
1987–88 2 1ª Div. Nacional 12th
1988–89 2 1ª Div. Nacional 10th Relegated
1989–90 3 1ª Div. B 2nd Promoted
1990–91 2 1ª Div. Nacional 4th
1991–92 2 1ª Div. Nacional 3rd
1992–93 2 1ª Div. Nacional 3rd
1993–94 2 1ª Div. Nacional 1st Promoted
1994–95 1 ASOBAL 12th
1995–96 1 ASOBAL 6th
1996–97 1 ASOBAL 2nd
1997–98 1 ASOBAL 3rd / 1/2
1998–99 1 ASOBAL 2nd / runners-up
1999–00 1 ASOBAL 2nd / 1/2
2000–01 1 ASOBAL 1st Champion
Season Tier Division Pos. Notes
2001–02 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2002–03 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2003–04 1 ASOBAL 4th
2004–05 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2005–06 1 ASOBAL 5th
2006–07 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2007–08 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2008–09 1 ASOBAL 5th
2009–10 1 ASOBAL 4th
2010–11 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2011–12 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2012–13 1 ASOBAL 4th
2013–14 1 ASOBAL 5th
2014–15 1 ASOBAL 7th
2015–16 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2016–17 1 ASOBAL 2nd
2017–18 1 ASOBAL 2nd
2018–19 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2019–20 1 ASOBAL 2nd
2020–21 1 ASOBAL 7th
2021–22 1 ASOBAL 7th

Trophies

  • Liga ASOBAL: 1
    • Winners: 2000–01.
    • Runners-up: 1996–97, 1998–99, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2019–20
  • Copa del Rey: 1
    • Winners: 2001–02.
    • Runners-up: 2009–10, 2020–21.
  • ASOBAL Cup: 2
    • Winners: 1998–99, 2008–09.
    • Runners-up: 1996–97, 1997–98, 2007–08, 2011–12, 2017–18, 2022–23.
  • Supercopa ASOBAL
    • Runners-up: 2001–02, 2002–03, 2021–22.
  • EHF Cup Winner's Cup: 2
    • Winners: 1998–99, 2004–05.
    • Runners-up: 2000–01, 2006–07.

European record

Cup Winners' Cup

From the 2012–13 season, the men's competition was merged with the EHF Cup.

Season Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1998–99
Winners
1/16 Lithuania Šiauliai Universitetas 39–19 32–12 71–31
1/8 Greece Athinaikos H.C. 30–14 29–20 59–34
1/4 Turkey Çankaya Belediyesi 33–16 27–26 60–42
1/2 North Macedonia RK Vardar 35–20 29–27 64–47
Finals Spain Caja Cantabria Santander 32–23 19–20 51–43
2004–05
Winners
1/32 Italy Torggler Group Merano 35–19 38–28 73–47
1/16 Bosnia and Herzegovina RK Bosna Sarajevo 43–28 42–33 85–61
1/8 Czech Republic HC Baník Karviná 38–28 38–30 76–58
1/4 Germany HSV Hamburg 25–27 29–25 54–52
1/2 Bosnia and Herzegovina HRK Izviđač Ljubuški 37–30 38–33 75–63
Finals Croatia RK Zagreb 37–25 31–25 68–50

EHF ranking

As of 14/12/2022[2]
RankTeamPoints
44Czech Republic HC Dukla Prague126
45Poland KS Azoty-Puławy119
46Romania HC Dobrogea Sud Constanța118
47Spain Ademar León117
48Spain BM Granollers113
49Czech Republic HCB Karviná107
50Norway ØIF Arendal106

Former club members

Notable former players

Former coaches

SeasonsCoachCountry
1995 Isidoro Martínez Spain
1995–2007 Manolo Cadenas Spain
2007–2011 Jordi Ribera Spain
2011–2012 Isidoro Martínez Spain
2012–2013 Manolo Cadenas Spain
2013–2015 Dani Gordo Spain
2015–2019 Rafael Guijosa Spain
2019 Diego Dorado Spain
2019– Manolo Cadenas Spain

References

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