Niners Chemnitz Explained

Niners Chemnitz
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League:Basketball Bundesliga
History:BV Chemnitz 99
(1999–2017)
Niners Chemnitz
(2017–present)
Nickname:Orange Army
Arena:Messe Chemnitz
Capacity:5,200
City:Chemnitz, Saxony, Germany
Colors:Orange, Red, White
Coach:Rodrigo Pastore
Championships:1 FIBA Europe Cup
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Niners Chemnitz e.V., also named Chemnitz 99, is a German basketball club based in Chemnitz, Saxony.[1] Currently, the team plays in the Basketball Bundesliga.

Since its foundation in 1999, the team has played in Germany's lower divisions but moved up second division ProA in 2002. It promoted to Germany's prime league Basketball Bundesliga for the first time in 2020.[2] The Niners won the FIBA Europe Cup in 2024.

History

The club was formed in 1999 as "BV Chemnitz 99" by the fusion of the clubs BG Chemnitz and Lok Chemnitz. In 2001, BV Chemnitz 99 began a cooperation with the Chemnitz University of Technology, which is why "TU" was added to the team name. In the summer of 2002, the division of the men's team (BV TU Chemnitz 99) and the women's team (Chemcats Chemnitz) followed. For the men's team, the nickname Niners evolved through the foundation year 1999.

On 28 May 2015, Chemnitz hired Argentine Rodrigo Pastore as new head coach.[3] In 2017, the nickname Niners was officially adopted as new club name.

In the 2019–20 season, Chemnitz was highly successful until the season was declared void due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on its first place in the standings, the Niners were promoted to the Basketball Bundesliga for the first time in club history.[4]

The Niners entered the qualifying rounds of the 2022–23 Basketball Champions League, making their debut in European competition.[5] In their second European season, the Niners won the 2023–24 FIBA Europe Cup championship, their first trophy in club history.[6] They became the second German team to win the competition.

Season by season

SeasonTierLeagueGerman CupEuropean competitions
2010–11ProA
2011–12ProA
2012–13ProA
2013–14ProA
2014–15ProA
2015–16ProA
ProA
ProA
ProA
ProAbgcolor=#cfc
Bundesliga
2021–221BundesligaSemifinals
2022–231BundesligaRound of 16Qualification
4 FIBA Europe CupSecond Round
2023–241Bundesliga3rdQuarterfinalsalign=center bgcolor=goldChampion
2024–251Bundesliga2024–25 BBL-Pokal
Source: Eurobasket.com

Arenas

The first arena of Chemnitz 99 was the Richard-Hartmann-Halle, which had a maximum capacity of 2,000 people. Starting from the 2019–20 season, the team moved to the Chemnitz Arena, with a capacity of 5,200 people.

ArenaYearsCapacity
1999–2019
Messe Chemnitz 2019–present

Players

Notable players

Honours

FIBA Europe Cup

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kontakt und Ansprechpartner. 4 July 2020.
  2. http://www.chemnitz99.de/saison_2010_11/mitteilungen/pm_04_25.php Würzburg im Endspiel eine Nummer zu groß für die NINERS
  3. Web site: NINERS CHEMNITZ – Rodrigo Pastore wird neuer Headcoach – BARMER 2. Basketball Bundesliga .
  4. Web site: Niners Chemnitz: Aufstieg in Basketball-Bundesliga ohne Feier. Sportbuzzer.de. 4 July 2020.
  5. Web site: Field set for Season Seven: 18 national champs head the lineup . 24 June 2022 . FIBA.basketball . en.
  6. Web site: NINERS Chemnitz land maiden European title with FIBA Europe Cup triumph . 25 April 2024 . FIBA.basketball . en.