CB Ciudad de Logroño

CB Ciudad de Logroño is a team of handball based in Logroño, Spain. It plays in Liga ASOBAL.

Location of BM Logrono La Rioja
Logroño
Logroño
Location of BM Logrono La Rioja

CB Ciudad de Logroño
Full nameClub Balonmano Ciudad de Logroño
Founded2003
ArenaPalacio de los Deportes de La Rioja, Logroño
Capacity3,809
PresidentSegundo José Viguera
Head coachMiguel Ángel Velasco
LeagueLiga ASOBAL
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away
Website
Official site

History

The club was founded in 2003. Since 2006, he has been playing in the Spanish first division, the Liga ASOBAL. In the 2008/09 season, the team took 7th place, so it was able to start in the international field for the first time: the EHF Cup. In the 2012/13 first-class season, the team took 3rd place in the league and was thus allowed to start in the EHF Champions League for the first time.

Crest, colours, supporters

Naming history

Name Period
Darien Logroño 2003–2006
Naturhouse La Rioja 2006–2017
CBM La Rioja 2017–2018
BM Logroño La Rioja 2018–present

Kits

Sports Hall information

Team

Current squad

Squad for the 2022–23 season[1]
BM Logrono La Rioja

Technical staff

  • Head Coach: Spain Miguel Ángel Velasco
  • Assistant Coach: Spain José Ignacio Martínez Castillejo

Transfers

Transfers for the 2022–23 season

Previous squads

Retired numbers

BM Logrono La Rioja retired numbers
Nationality Player Position Tenure
12SpainGurutz AguinagaldeGoalkeeper2005–2018
17SpainRubén GarabayaLine Player2010–2018

Honours

Season by season

Season Tier Division Pos. Notes
2003–04 3 1ª Nacional 1st Promoted
2004–05 2 Honor B 7th
2005–06 2 Honor B 2nd Promoted
2006–07 1 ASOBAL 14th
2007–08 1 ASOBAL 12th
2008–09 1 ASOBAL 7th
2009–10 1 ASOBAL 5th
2010–11 1 ASOBAL 9th
2011–12 1 ASOBAL 7th
2012–13 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2013–14 1 ASOBAL 2nd
2014–15 1 ASOBAL 2nd
2015–16 1 ASOBAL 2nd
2016–17 1 ASOBAL 3rd

European record

Season Competition Round Club 1st leg 2nd leg Aggregate
2012–13 EHF Cup Round 3 Serbia Vojvodina 28–19 22–26 50–45
Season Competition Round Club 1st leg 2nd leg Aggregate
2013–14 EHF Champions League Group Stage Germany HSV Hamburg 24–33 27–34 5th place
Germany Flensburg 32–32 25–37
Slovenia Gorenje 34–31 28–33
Denmark Aalborg 25–23 24–28
Sweden HK Drott 38–34 35–35
Season Competition Round Club 1st leg 2nd leg Aggregate
2014–15 EHF Champions League Group Stage Germany THW Kiel 30–34 32–34 4th place
France Paris Saint-Germain 35–32 25–32
Croatia Zagreb 22–21 30–31
Belarus HC Meshkov Brest 39–31 33–33
North Macedonia Metalurg Skopje 31–26 28–29
Last 16 Hungary MKB Veszprém 22–31 31–37 54–68
Season Competition Round Club 1st leg 2nd leg Aggregate
2015–16 EHF Champions League Group Stage Belarus HC Meshkov Brest 28–32 33–31 2nd place
Portugal FC Porto 30–23 31–35
Serbia RK Vojvodina 31–22 31–26
Slovakia HT Tatran Prešov 37–29 21–19
Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi 30–26 26–27
PO Ukraine HC Motor Zaporizhzhia 30–31 37–39 67–70
Season Competition Round Club 1st leg 2nd leg Aggregate
2016–17 EHF Champions League Group Stage France Montpellier 31–30 27–37 2nd place
Norway Elverum Håndball 32–27 28–21
North Macedonia Metalurg Skopje 31–25 23–24
Slovakia HT Tatran Prešov 33–27 27–30
Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi 34–37 28–28
PO France HBC Nantes 25–31 31–37 56–68

EHF ranking

As of 14 December 2022[2]
RankTeamPoints
37Sweden IK Sävehof143
38Romania CS Minaur Baia Mare140
39Sweden IFK Kristianstad137
40Spain BM Logrono La Rioja133
41Norway Nærbø IL133
42Greece AEK Athens132
43Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi128

Former club members

Notable former players

Former coaches

SeasonsCoachCountry
2007–2018 Jota González Spain
2018– Miguel Ángel Velasco Spain

References

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