Bayer Giants Leverkusen Explained

Bayer Giants Leverkusen
Color1:White
Color2:
  1. D80100
Leagues:ProB
History:TuS Bayer 04 Leverkusen 1961–1983
TSV Bayer 04 Leverkusen 1983–2000
Bayer Giants Leverkusen
2000–present
Arena:Ostermann-Arena
Capacity:3,500
Location:Leverkusen, North Rhine-Westphalia
Championships:14 German Championships
10 German Cup
1 ProB
H Body:FFFFFF
H Shorts:D80100
H Pattern S:_basket_in_white
A Body:D80100
A Shorts:D80100
A Pattern S:_basket_with_white

Bayer Giants Leverkusen is a professional basketball club, part of the TSV Bayer 04 Leverkusen sports club based in Leverkusen, Germany. It currently plays in ProB, the third division of German basketball.

Based on the number of titles, Leverkusen is the most successful team in the history of German Basketball with a record-14 championships and 10 Cups.[1] In 2009, the Bayer company cut down sponsorship and the club went down to Germany's ProB (third division) to restructure. The license for the Basketball Bundesliga was transferred to the newly formed Giants Düsseldorf.

The team is currently coached by two of its legends: Hansi Gnad and Michael Koch as his assistant.[2]

History

Founded as TuS Bayer 04 Leverkusen in 1961, the club moved up to first division Basketball Bundesliga in 1968. The club won 5 national championships and 4 German Cups as TuS 04 Leverkusen before it changed its name and continued its dominance as TSV Bayer 04 Leverkusen. Until today, the club has won more national titles than any other German basketball team.[3]

The first success came in 1970 when TuS 04 won the double under coach Günter Hagedorn with more Trophies and participations in European competitions following during the 1970s. From 1970 until 1977 the club played in 5 Cup Finals winning four titles. In 1985 and 1986 Bayer won the German Championship again before establishing itself as a powerhouse in the 1990s with constant presence in the FIBA Euroleague after winning 7 championships in a row (1990-96) with coach Dirk Bauermann.

After the team lost three of its key players on a free transfer in the summer of 1996 (Michael Koch, Chris Welp and Henning Harnisch) Alba Berlin was the team that broke Bayer's dominance with the last success being the 2nd place in the league in 2000. The last participation in Europe's top competition was in the 2000-01 season when the club as German's runners-up played in the Suproleague.

To the disdain of all of its supporters, in 2008 the Bayer company decided to make dramatic cuts in its sponsorship for the team and simply focus on its football operations and amateur athletics. This move forced the club's basketball team to cede its Basketball Bundesliga license to the newly formed Giants Düsseldorf and move down to Germany's 4th Division Regionalliga to restructure. Thousands of club supporters gathered in the streets of Leverkusen to protest the company's move.[4] [5] Giants won the Regionalliga and promotion to the ProB in their first season.

In 2013, the club promoted to the ProA League, but it was relegated to the ProB two years later. In 2019 Bayer returned to the ProA, German basketball's second tier, but relegated in 2023.

Season by season

SeasonTierLeaguePos.German CupEuropean competitions
1989–901Bundesliga1stChampion
1990–911Bundesliga1stChampion
1991–921Bundesliga1st
1992–931Bundesliga1stChampion
1993–941Bundesliga1stSemifinalist
1994–951Bundesliga1stChampion
1995–961Bundesliga1stRunner-up
1996–971Bundesliga4th
1997–981Bundesliga8th
1998–991Bundesliga4th
1999–001Bundesliga2nd
2000–011Bundesliga3rdThird position
2001–021Bundesliga5th
2002–031Bundesliga8thalign=center bgcolor=silverRU
2003–041Bundesliga8th
2004–051Bundesliga13th
2005–061Bundesliga10th
2006–071Bundesliga8th
2007–081Bundesliga6th
2008–0941st Regionalliga
2009–103ProB7th
2010–113ProB
2011–123ProB
2012–133ProB
2013–142ProA13th
2014–152ProA14th
2015–162ProAbgcolor=#FFBBBB align="center"15th
2016–173ProB
2017–183ProB
2018–193ProB
2019–202ProA5th
2020–212ProA5th
2021–222ProA5th
2022–232ProAbgcolor=#FFBBBB align="center"17th

Honours

European participations

The club has competed for 21 seasons in European competitions organized by FIBA Europe from 1970 until 2003.[6]

4 times (1974–75, 1987–88, 1989–90, 1997–98)

5 times (1975–76, 1988–89, 1998–99, 1999–00, 2001–02)

1 time (2002–03)

Games against NBA teams

Seattle SuperSonics 109 – Bayer 04 Leverkusen 86

Roster 2022/23

  1. [7]
NameBirth DateNationalityHeightBody WeightPositionFormer Club
0Abdul Mohamed03.12.19962,01 m93 kgSF/PFMontreal Alliance (CAN-CEBL)
2Aimé Olma16.05.20041,93 m83 kgSGGiants Düsseldorf (GER-ProB)
3Gabriel de Oliveira03.03.1998 / 2,06 m102 kgPFRostock Seawolves (BBL)
4Lennart Litera15.04.20041,91 m70 kgSGBBV Köln-Nordwest
5Kadre Gray02.07.19971,85 m86 kgPG/SGOttawa BlackJacks (CAN-CEBL)
7Matthew Meredith07.07.2000 / 1,98 m93 kgSG/SFSkyliners Frankfurt (BBL)
8Dejan Kovacevic27.12.19962,08 m99 kgPFCrailsheim Merlins (BBL)
9Marius Stoll09.07.19991,97 m94 kgPGOrangeAcademy (GER-ProB)
10Haris Hujic30.04.19971,92 m93 kgPG/SGBG Göttingen (BBL)
18Justin Gnad24.06.19971,94 m105 kgSFOwn Youth
21Robert Drijencic20.04.19961,93 m93 kgPG/SG/SFWiha Panthers Schwenningen (GER-ProA)
22Dennis Heinzmann22.01.19912,16 m120 kgCRheinStars Köln (GER-ProB)
24Thomas Fankhauser26.08.20012,01 m96 kgSF/PFRheinStars Köln (GER-ProB)
30TreVion Crews03.03.19961,83 m82 kgPGBBC Résidence (LUX)
33Nick Hornsby21.06.19952,01 m107 kgSF/PFCapital City Go-Go (NBA G-League)
34Stef Van Bussel18.06.20042,01 m100 kgPF/CBAL (basketball club) (NL)
55Joel Lungelu20.08.20032,05 m114 kgPF/COwn Youth
HCHansi Gnad04.06.1963Headcoach
ACJacques Schneider16.08.1992Assistant Coach
ACPhilipp Stachula14.10.1987Assistant Coach
ACPhilip Jacobs20.10.1993Athletiktrainer

Notable players

To appear in this section a player must have played at least two seasons for the club AND either:– Set a club record or won an individual award as a professional player.
– Played at least one official international match for his senior national team at any time.

Head coaches

CoachStartEnd
1969 1973
1975 1978
1980 1984
1984 1989
1989 1998
1998 2002
2002 2005
2005 2008
20112018
2018 present

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Leverkusen, Bayer04: Bayer-Giants.
  2. https://www.giants-leverkusen.de/presse-medien/news/newsleser/mike-koch-kehrt-nach-leverkusen-zurueck/ Koch returns, 20 October 2023
  3. Web site: Leverkusen, Bayer04: Bayer-Giants.
  4. Web site: Leverkusen: Giants-Fants buhen Dezernenten aus . www.rp-online.de . 22 May 2022 . https://archive.today/20120909105228/http://www.rp-online.de/bergischesland/leverkusen/nachrichten/leverkusen/Giants-Fants-buhen-Dezernenten-aus_aid_545344.html . 9 September 2012 . dead.
  5. Web site: Rettet die Giants! - Fans wollen Giants behalten (RP, 13.02.08) . 2010-03-31 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141230042937/http://www.rettet-die-giants.de/content/view/62/33/ . 2014-12-30 . dead .
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20190128030338/http://sathanasias.bravepages.com/b-teams/bt-ger.html German clubs in Europe - sathanasias
  7. Web site: Kader - Giants TSV Bayer 04 Leverkusen . 2023-03-27 . www.giants-leverkusen.de.