CB Tizona

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(Redirected from Ford Burgos)
UBU Tizona
UBU Tizona logo
LeaguesLEB Plata
Founded2013
ArenaPolideportivo El Plantío
Capacity2,432
LocationBurgos, Spain
Team colorsBlue and orange
   
PresidentMiguel Ángel Benavente
Vice-president(s)Vicente Sebastián
Head coachLluís Riera
Championships2 LEB Oro
2 Copa Castilla y León
Websitecbtizona.es

Club Baloncesto Tizona S.A.D., more commonly known as UBU Tizona by sponsorship reasons, is a professional basketball team based in Burgos, Castilla y León and plays in the Polideportivo El Plantío. The team currently plays in Liga_Española_de_Baloncesto.

History[edit]

The club started in 2013 as the successor of CB Atapuerca, dissolved after failing to promote to Liga ACB, due to not fulfilling all the requirements.[1]

The name is a homage to former CB Espada Tizona, the main club in Burgos during the 1970s and the 1980s, and was created as a Sociedad Anónima Deportiva with the aim to make easier a future promotion to ACB,[2] goal achieved in its first season. Named Ford Burgos like its predecessor, the club promoted to Liga ACB in the 2013–14 season and did not fulfill all the necessary requirements to enter in the top flight, joining again the LEB Oro league.[3]

In its second season, Tizona promoted again to Liga ACB, this time as LEB Oro champion, after winning its last 13 games in a row.[4] Despite it was the third time in a row Burgos had a team which promoted to the top league, it could not fulfill the requirements to join it.[5]

After failing in its second attempt, the club sued the ACB for not admitting it in the league and decided not entering any competition with the professional LEB Oro team.[6] and continued its activity with the youth teams. The team that acted as reserve teams in the previous seasons, became the main senior team and played in Primera División. Tizona also changed its traditional blue uniform to a red-and-white one for the 2015–16 season,[7] but came back to the blue in the next one for playing in Liga EBA, after its promotion as champions of the Regional group of Primera División.

In July 2017, thanks to the denounce of CB Tizona, local team San Pablo Burgos and Gipuzkoa Basket could promote to Liga ACB.

On 18 May 2019, Tizona came back to professional basketball by achieving promotion to LEB Plata, after winning one of the four groups of the final stage. Just one season later, the club came back to LEB Oro five years later, after the 2019–20 LEB Plata season was curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Tizona was qualified in the third position when the league was suspended.

Sponsorship naming[edit]

Season by season[edit]

Season Tier Division Pos. W–L Cup competitions
2013–14 2 LEB Oro 2nd[a] 27–8
2014–15 2 LEB Oro 1st[b] 22–6
2015–16 5 1ª División 1st 14–2
2016–17 4 Liga EBA 10th 8–18
2017–18 4 Liga EBA 7th 16–14
2018–19 4 Liga EBA 2nd 25–4
2019–20 3 LEB Plata 3rd[c] 16–9
2020–21 2 LEB Oro 9th 5–11
2021–22 3 LEB Plata 4th 16–10
2022–23 3 LEB Plata 1st 25–3 Copa LEB Plata C
  1. ^ Did not promote to ACB after failing to fulfill the requirements to join the league.
  2. ^ Did not promote to ACB after failing to fulfill the requirements to join the league, and resigned to continue playing in LEB Oro for requesting their place in ACB judicially.
  3. ^ Season curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Head coaches[edit]

  • Andreu Casadevall 2013–2015
  • José Luis Cubillo 2015–2017, 2018–2020
  • Juan Carlos García 2017–2018
  • José Manuel Naveira 2018
  • Jorge Elorduy 2020
  • Lluís Riera 2020–present

Honors[edit]

Trophies[edit]

Individual awards[edit]

All LEB Oro Team

References and notes[edit]

  1. ^ El Tizona vuelve a competir Diario de Burgos, 6 August 2013
  2. ^ History of CB Tizona Official website
  3. ^ Comunicado oficial sobre la inscripción del Club Baloncesto Tizona SAD; ACB.com, 16 June 2014
  4. ^ Autocid de récord; Diario de Burgos, 11 April 2015 (in Spanish)
  5. ^ "Comunicado oficial sobre la no inscripción del Club Baloncesto Tizona SAD" (in Spanish). ACB.com. 15 June 2015. Archived from the original on 18 June 2015. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  6. ^ "Sin ACB la directiva del Tizona anuncia su marcha" (in Spanish). Burgos Deporte. 23 June 2015.
  7. ^ "El UBU esquiva la presión" (in Spanish). El Correo de Burgos. 20 November 2015. Retrieved 15 February 2016.

External links[edit]