BM Ciudad Real
Spanish handball club
Renovalia Ciudad Real | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Agrupación Deportiva Cultural Balonmano Ciudad Real | ||
Founded | 1983 | ||
Dissolved | 2011 | ||
Arena | Quijote Arena, Ciudad Real, Castile-La Mancha, Spain | ||
Capacity | 5,200 | ||
President | Domingo Díaz de Mera | ||
League | Liga ASOBAL | ||
2010–11 | 2nd | ||
|
Balonmano Ciudad Real was a Spanish handball team based in Ciudad Real, Castilla La Mancha. BM Ciudad Real plays in Liga ASOBAL.
History
In July 1983 is founded in the city of Ciudad Real a handball club named Asociación Deportiva Cultural Caserío Vigón. In 1993, other Ciudad Real-based team, Asociación Deportiva Cultural Ciudad Real purchase the rights of ADC Caserío Vigón and renames the team as Balonmano Ciudad Real
Relocation
In 2011, BM Ciudad Real was relocated to Madrid under the new name BM Atlético de Madrid.[1] It was finally dissolved two years later.
Club names
- Agrupación Deportiva Cultural Caserio Vigón – (1983–1993)
- Agrupación Deportiva Cultural Ciudad Real – (1993–2011)
Trophies
- Liga ASOBAL: 5
- Winners: 2003–04, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09 & 2009–10
- Runners-Up: 2002–03
- EHF Champions League: 3
- EHF Men's Champions Trophy: 3
- Winners: 2005, 2006 and 2008
- EHF Challenge Cup
- Runners-Up: 1998–99
- Copa del Rey: 3
- Winners: 2003, 2008 & 2011
- Runners-Up: 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006
- ASOBAL Cup: 6
- Winners: 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 & 2011
- Supercopa ASOBAL: 3
- Winners: 2005, 2008 & 2011
- Runners-Up: 2004
- City Cup
- Runners-Up: 1999
- EHF Cup Winner's Cup: 2
- Winners: 2002, 2003
- IHF Super Globe: 2
- Double: 1
- Winners: 2007–08
Statistics 2010/11
Liga ASOBAL | Position | Pts | P | W | D | L | F | A |
BM Ciudad Real | 2nd | 54 | 30 | 27 | 0 | 3 | 986 | 777 |
Stadium information
- Name: – Quijote Arena
- City: – Ciudad Real
- Capacity: – 5,200
- Address: – Polígono Industrial Larache.
Notable coaches
Famous players
- José Javier Hombrados
- Jordi Núñez
- Antonio Muñoz Villanueva
- Santi Urdiales
- Angel Hermida
- Javier Valenzuela
- Xabier Mikel Rekondo
- Talant Duyshebaev
- Mirza Džomba
- Ólafur Stefánsson
- Iker Romero
- Julen Aguinagalde
- Petar Metličić
- Joan Cañellas
- Uroš Zorman
- Hussein Zaky
- Aleš Pajovič
- Gheorghe Covaciu
- Didier Dinart
- Jonas Källman
- David Davis
- Alberto Entrerríos
- / Siarhei Rutenka
- Kiril Lazarov
- Isaías Guardiola
- Mariusz Jurkiewicz
- Eric Gull
- Chema Rodríguez
- Luc Abalo
- Jérôme Fernandez
- / Rolando Uríos
- Senjanin Maglajlija
- / Julio Fis
- Torsten Laen
- Claus Møller Jakobsen
- Sergey Pogorelov
- Christian Hjermind
- / Arpad Šterbik
- Viran Morros
- Egor Evdokimov
References
- ^ BM Ciudad Real pasa a llamarse BM Atlético de Madrid
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to BM Ciudad Real.
- (in Spanish and English) BM Ciudad Real Official Website
- (in Spanish) Documentacion para entrenadores de Balonmano
- (in Spanish) Revista digital de la Liga Asobal Balonmano
- v
- t
- e
- 1956–57: Dukla Prague
- 1958–59: Redbergslids IK
- 1959–60: Frisch Auf Göppingen
- 1961–62: Frisch Auf Göppingen
- 1962–63: Dukla Prague
- 1964–65: Dinamo București
- 1965–66: DHfK Leipzig
- 1966–67: VfL Gummersbach
- 1967–68: Steaua București
- 1969–70: VfL Gummersbach
- 1970–71: VfL Gummersbach
- 1971–72: Partizan Bjelovar
- 1972–73: MAI Moscow
- 1973–74: VfL Gummersbach
- 1974–75: ASK Frankfurt/Oder
- 1975–76: Borac Banja Luka
- 1976–77: Steaua București
- 1977–78: Magdeburg
- 1978–79: TV Großwallstadt
- 1979–80: TV Großwallstadt
- 1980–81: Magdeburg
- 1981–82: Budapest Honvéd
- 1982–83: VfL Gummersbach
- 1983–84: Dukla Prague
- 1984–85: Metaloplastika
- 1985–86: Metaloplastika
- 1986–87: SKA Minsk
- 1987–88: CSKA Moscow
- 1988–89: SKA Minsk
- 1989–90: SKA Minsk
- 1990–91: Barcelona
- 1991–92: Zagreb
- 1992–93: Zagreb
- 1993–94: TEKA Santander
- 1994–95: Bidasoa Irún
- 1995–96: Barcelona
- 1996–97: Barcelona
- 1997–98: Barcelona
- 1998–99: Barcelona
- 1999–2000: Barcelona
- 2000–01: Portland San Antonio
- 2001–02: Magdeburg
- 2002–03: Montpellier
- 2003–04: Celje
- 2004–05: Barcelona
- 2005–06: Ciudad Real
- 2006–07: THW Kiel
- 2007–08: Ciudad Real
- 2008–09: Ciudad Real
- 2009–10: THW Kiel
- 2010–11: Barcelona
- 2011–12: THW Kiel
- 2012–13: HSV Hamburg
- 2013–14: Flensburg-Handewitt
- 2014–15: Barcelona
- 2015–16: Kielce
- 2016–17: Vardar
- 2017–18: Montpellier
- 2018–19: Vardar
- 2019–20: THW Kiel
- 2020–21: Barcelona
- 2021–22: Barcelona
- 2022–23: Magdeburg