BM Neptuno
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Club Balonmano Neptuno/Atlético de Madrid was a Spanish professional handball team based in Madrid, Spain. Part of the Atlético Madrid sports organization. They played two seasons in the Liga ASOBAL and their home court was the Palacio Vistalegre.
History
Balonmano Atlético de Madrid was created in the early 1950s, it won 11 Spanish Leagues and 10 Spanish Cups between 1952 and 1987, and reached the final of the 1984–85 European Cup and the 1986–87 EHF Cup; they lost both to, respectively, Metaloplastika Sabac and Granitas Kaunas. Jesús Gil disbanded the team in 1992, but it still competed as Atlético de Madrid Alcobendas for two more seasons under the management of some stockholders before finally disappearing in 1994.
Los Colchoneros welcomed handball back into their organization in 2011, formally known as BM Ciudad Real, which folded and relocated to Madrid for financial reasons. The new team started off quite successfully, beating FC Barcelona Handbol 33–26 in the Supercup match in August 2011. When they did so, fan associations in Ciudad Real created Club Balonmano Caserío Ciudad Real as a replacement.
In July 2013, the club announced the shutdown of BM Neptuno/Atletico de Madrid due to little financial support received from public and private entities.
Season by season
| Season | Tier | Division | Pos. | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Season Tier Division Pos. Notes 2011–12 1 ASOBAL 2nd 2012–13 1 ASOBAL 2nd Disbanded | ||||
| 2011–12 | 1 | ASOBAL | 2nd | |
| 2012–13 | 1 | ASOBAL | 2nd | Disbanded |
- 2 seasons in Liga ASOBAL
Trophies
- Liga ASOBAL: Runners-Up: (2). 2011–12, 2012–13.
- Copa del Rey: Champions: (2). 2012, 2013
- Copa ASOBAL: Runners-Up: (1). 2012
- Supercopa ASOBAL: Champions: (1). 2011 Runners-Up: (1). 2012
- EHF Champions League Runners-Up: (1). 2011–12.
- IHF Super Globe: Champions: (1). 2012
Home arenas
| City | Arena's name | Term |
|---|---|---|
| Madrid | Palacio Vistalegre | 2011–2013 |
Notable players
- Spain Isaías Guardiola (2011–2012)
- Spain JJ Hombrados
- Spain Julen Aguinagalde
- Sweden Jonas Källman
- Spain David Davis
- Spain Roberto García
- France Xavier Barachet
- Spain Joan Cañellas
- Poland Mariusz Jurkiewicz
- Croatia Jakov Gojun
- Croatia Ivano Balić
- North Macedonia Kiril Lazarov
- Iceland Ólafur Stefánsson
Notable coaches
External links
- (in Spanish)
- (in Spanish)
- on Facebook