Segunda FEB

(Redirected from LEB 2)

The Segunda FEB, formerly known as LEB 2 and LEB Plata, is the third basketball division of the Spanish basketball league system and the second basketball division organized by the Spanish Basketball Federation. Since 2019, three teams are promoted to Primera FEB and six teams are relegated to Tercera FEB.

Segunda FEB
FormerlyLEB 2 (2000–2007)
LEB Plata (2007–2024)
Founded2000; 24 years ago (2000)
First season2000–01
CountrySpain
ConfederationFIBA Europe
Number of teams28
Level on pyramid3
Promotion toPrimera FEB
Relegation toTercera FEB
Domestic cup(s)Spain Cup
Current championsCartagena CB
(1st title)
Most championshipsIraurgi SB
(2 titles)
Websitelebplata.es
2023–24 season

From the 2024–25 season it will be named Segunda FEB.[1]

LEB Plata history

edit
Former LEB Plata logo (2015–2024).

League names

edit
  • 2000–2006: LEB 2
  • 2006–2007: Adecco LEB 2
  • 2007–2015: Adecco Plata
  • 2015–2024: LEB Plata
  • From 2024 onwards: Segunda FEB

Champions

edit
SeasonChampionOther promoted teamsMVP
2000–01Llobregat Centre CornellàCD Universidad Complutense Rahshon Turner
2001–02Basket Bilbao BerriCB Tarragona Melvin Simon
2002–03CB AracenaCBC Algeciras Cepsa John Schuck
2003–04Valls Félix HotelCalpe Aguas de Calpe Shalawn Miller
2004–05CB L'HospitaletAlcúdia-Aracena Thomas Terrell
2005–06Autocid Ford BurgosAguas de Valencia Gandía Brett Beeson
2006–07Beirasar RosalíaCiudad de La Laguna Canarias Jason Blair
2007–08Akasvayu VicIllescas Urban CLM Stevie Johnson
2008–09Faymasa PalenciaWTC Almeda Park Cornellà Robert Joseph
2009–10Fundación Adepal AlcázarLobe Huesca Ronald Thompson
2010–11Knet RiojaIberostar Mallorca Bàsquet Ian O'Leary
2011–12River AndorraAguas de Sousas Ourense Marko Todorović
2012–13Unión Financiera Asturiana Oviedo BaloncestoPalma Air Europa Will Hanley
2013–14Fundación Baloncesto FuenlabradaCB Prat Ola Atoyebi
2014–15Cáceres Patrimonio de la HumanidadAmics Castelló Nick Washburn
2015–16Marín Ence PeixegalegoSáenz Horeca Araberri Javonte Green
2016–17Sammic ISBComercial Ulsa Ciudad de Valladolid Sergio de la Fuente
2017–18Covirán GranadaReal Canoe NC Tyson Pérez
2018–19HLA AlicanteAfanion CB Almansa and Marín Ence PeixeGalego Jordi Trias
2019–20Season curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[a]
2020–21Juaristi ISBBarça B and CB Prat
2021–22Grupo Alega Cantabria CBTBueno Arenas Albacete Basket and Hereda Club Ourense Baloncesto
2022–23UBU TizonaCB Prat and Hestia Menorca
2023–24ODILO Cartagena CB CBZamora Enamora and CB Starlabs Morón

Performance by club

edit
ClubWinnersPromotionsWinning Years
Iraurgi SB222016–17, 2020–21
CB Cornellà122000–01
CB Marín Peixegalego122015–16
Bilbao Basket112001–02
CB Aracena112002–03
CB Valls112003–04
CB L'Hospitalet112004–05
CB Atapuerca112005–06
CI Rosalía de Castro112006–07
CB Vic112007–08
Palencia Baloncesto112008–09
CDB Amistad y Deporte112009–10
CB Clavijo112010–11
BC Andorra112011–12
Oviedo CB112012–13
Fundación Baloncesto Fuenlabrada112013–14
Cáceres Ciudad del Baloncesto112014–15
Fundación CB Granada112017–18
Fundación Lucentum Baloncesto112018–19
CB Myrtia112019–20
CD Estela112021–22
CB Tizona122022–23
Cartagena CB112023–24
CB Prat03
Club Ourense Baloncesto02
CD Universidad Complutense01
CB Tarragona01
CB Ciudad de Algeciras01
CB Calpe01
CB Alcúdia01
Gandía BA01
CB 1939 Canarias01
CB Illescas01
CB Peñas Huesca01
Bàsquet Mallorca01
CB Bahía San Agustín01
AB Castelló01
Araberri BC01
CB Ciudad de Valladolid01
Real Canoe NC01
CB Almansa01
Bàsquet Girona01
FC Barcelona Bàsquet B01
Albacete Basket01
CB Menorca01
CB Zamora01
CB Morón01

Current clubs

edit
Alginet
Godella
Mallorca
Salou
Sant Antoni
Alcalá
Ciudad Huelva
Enrique Soler
Huelva Comercio
Barcelona teams:
L'Hospitalet
Mataró
Prat
Santfeliuenc
Location of teams in 2023–24 LEB Plata
Red: Group East; Green: Group West
Mataró
Santfeliuenc
Location of teams from Barcelona in 2023–24 LEB Plata
Location of teams from the Canary Islands in 2023–24 LEB Plata
TeamHome cityArena
Bueno Arenas Albacete BasketAlbaceteEl Parque
CB Almansa con AfanionAlmansaPolideportivo de Almansa
CB L'Horta GodellaGodellaMunicipal
CB PratEl Prat de LlobregatPavelló Joan Busquets
CB Starlabs MorónMorón de la FronteraAlameda
Ciudad de Huelva GestiaHuelvaCarolina Marín
Class Bàsquet Sant AntoniSant Antoni de PortmanySa Pedrera
Clínica Ponferrada SDPPonferradaPabellón Lydia Valentín
Damex UDEA AlgecirasAlgecirasDoctor Juan Carlos Mateo
Fibwi PalmaPalmaSon Moix
Fundación Globalcaja La RodaLa RodaJuan José Lozano Jareño
Gran Canaria BLas PalmasVega de San José
Homs UE MataróMataróJosep Mora
Huelva Comercio LRi21 VIRIDISHuelvaAndrés Estrada
Ibersol CB TarragonaTarragonaEl Serrallo
Juaristi ISBAzpeitiaMunicipal
Juventud Alcalá Escribano EMEAlcalá de HenaresFundación Montemadrid
Lobe Huesca La MagiaHuescaPalacio Municipal de Huesca
Maderas Sorlí BenicarlóBenicarlóPavelló Poliesportiu Municipal
Melilla Ciudad del Deporte Enrique SolerMelillaGuillermo García Pezzi
OCA Global CB SalouSalouCentre Salou
ODILO FC Cartagena CBCartagenaPalacio de Deportes
Pajarraco CB SantfeliuencSant Feliu de LlobregatJuan Carlos Navarro
Palmer Basket Mallorca PalmaLlucmajorSon Moix
Safir Fruits AlginetAlginetMunicipal
Sandá Electroclima CB L'HospitaletL'HospitaletNou Pavelló del Centre
Teknei Bizkaia ZornotzaAmorebieta-EtxanoLarrea
Zamora EnamoraZamoraÁngel Nieto

Copa LEB Plata

edit

The Copa LEB Plata (LEB Plata Cup) was a championship played from to 2001 to 2024.

In the first editions, the three top teams in the first half season and an organizer team played the Cup in a Final Four format. Since 2009, the teams who play this cup are two first qualified in the half season, and it's hosted by the first qualified. The winner of the Copa LEB Plata would be the first team in the play-offs if it finishes between the second and the fifth at the final of the Regular Season.

YearHostWinnerRunner-upScoreMVP
2001AlgecirasCB TarragonaCB Cornellà84–82 Salva Camps
2002BilbaoBilbao BasketCB Tarragona84–74 Lucho Fernández
2003PlasenciaCB AracenaCB Plasencia80–71 DeCarlo Deveaux
2004LogroñoCB ClavijoCI Rosalía de Castro77–75 Manu Coego
2005GandíaCB AtapuercaGandía Bàsquet98–78 Tony Smith
2006PontevedraCB AtapuercaCB Peñas Huesca88–78 Diego Guaita
2007Santiago de CompostelaClub Ourense BaloncestoCB 1939 Canarias90–89 Sony Vázquez
2008PalenciaCB VicCB Illescas66–64 Eulis Báez
2009PalenciaPalencia BaloncestoCB L'Hospitalet69–65 Carles Bravo
2010HuescaCB Peñas HuescaCD Huelva Baloncesto89–67 Stevie Johnson
2011LogroñoCB ClavijoBC Andorra79–72 Sidão Santana
2012Andorra la VellaAraberri BCBC Andorra82–74 Alberto Ausina
2013GuadalajaraCEBA GuadalajaraOviedo CB78–71 Sergio Llorente
2014FuenlabradaCB PratBaloncesto Fuenlabrada B83–79 Sergio Pérez
2015Castellón de la PlanaAB CastellóCEBA Guadalajara88–73 Nick Washburn
2016ÁvilaCB PeixefrescoÓbila CB76–66 Antonio Pantín
2017GranadaFundación CB GranadaFundación Lucentum Baloncesto80–74 Jesús Fernández
2018GranadaFundación CB GranadaCP La Roda71–63 Devin Wright
2019AlicanteFundación Lucentum BaloncestoCB Zamora86–68 Álex Galán
2020AzpeitiaIraurgi SBBàsquet Girona74–69 Spencer Reaves
2021Sant Joan DespíIraurgi SBFC Barcelona Bàsquet B84–82 Ibon Guridi
2022Amorebieta-EtxanoZornotza STSant Antoni Ibiza Feeling66–64 Alberto Cabrera
2023MahónCB TizonaCB Menorca90–76 Joe Cremo
2024ZamoraCB ZamoraCartagena CB95–89 Jonas Paukštė

Final Four Editions

edit

Since 2009, the Copa LEB Plata is only played with the two top teams at the first half of the LEB Plata season

Stat leaders at LEB Plata

edit
SeasonTop ratingPIRTop scorerPPGTop rebounderRPGTop AssistantAPG
2000–01 Rahshon Turner24.48 Nacho Yáñez21.83 Richard Lugo11.00 Carlos Braña4.20
2001–02 Melvin Simon24.31 Danny Moore20.60 Melvin Simon10.69 Fernando Pérez4.15
2002–03 David Schuck21.86 Duane Virgil20.12 David Schuck9.97 José Báez4.90
2003–04 Shalawn Miller25.42 Tony Smith22.69 José Manuel Coego11.31 Lino López4.96
2004–05 Thomas Terrell30.39 Thomas Terrell22.97 Antonio García13.07 Lino López5.10
2005–06 Brett Beeson22.23 Tony Smith21.03 Rammel Allen9.84 Jorge Jiménez6.03
2006–07 Jason Blair25.38 Brett Beeson19.21 Jakim Donaldson11.26 Frederic Castelló4.64
2007–08 Stevie Johnson25.39 Stevie Johnson21.39 Paulão Prestes9.40 Josep Marcos4.66
2008–09 Robert Joseph23.90 Tarick Johnson20.11 Pep Ortega8.73 Lino López4.40
2010–11 Ian O'Leary20.38 Mat Witt16.39 Ian O'Leary9.50 Mat Witt6.04
2011–12 Marko Todorović20.38 Alfredo Ott17.58 Alex Thompson8.48 Federico Bavosi5.83
2012–13 Will Hanley23.65 Will Hanley17.65 Will Hanley11.20 Fran Cárdenas6.35
2013–14 Olasumbo Atoyebi20.05 Ibon Carreto16.25 Olasumbo Atoyebi10.50 José Antonio Marco6.08
2014–15 Nick Washburn20.04 Ridge McKeither17.70 Dane Johnson9.13 José Antonio Marco7.12
2015–16 Javonte Green21.60 Gabe Rogers18.38 Jesús Fernández10.17 Javier Marín4.42
2016–17 Sergio de la Fuente19.17 Sergio de la Fuente17.13 Sergio de la Fuente10.20 Lamonte Thomas4.77
2017–18 Tyson Pérez20.57 Will Saunders17.41 Karamo Jawara9.81 Adrián Fuentes5.86

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Real Murcia was declared champion and promoted to LEB Oro alongside Bàsquet Girona and UBU Tizona.

References

edit
  1. ^ "La primera Comisión Delegada del periodo olímpico 2024-28 trae importantes novedades" (in Spanish). Spanish Basketball Federation. 24 May 2024.
edit