1970s Pallacanestro Reggiana was founded on 3 September 1974 by eight friends who wanted to establish a club that would unite the basketball community of
Reggio Emilia. They started to play in the regional Promozione in a white and blue jersey sponsored by Magazzini Jolly, with the season ending with a promotion to the Serie D, in which they stayed a couple of seasons before again moving up, to the Serie C. The 1977–78 preseason saw the club merge with Cestistica Tricolore and come under the ownership of Cantine
Riunite who also started sponsoring the club and changed its colours to white and red in the process. During the season itself, a team composed mainly by young local players led by
Gianni Codeluppi earned a promotion to the third division
Serie B. The summer again saw an organisational change as the club amalgamanated Pallacanestro Correggio, which led to the arrival of future great
Orazio Rustichelli in the squad. On the court, the team struggled, finishing the season at the last place which would have seen it relegated if not for an off-the-court reprieve. Over the next seasons the team established itself in the Serie B without managing to reach the next level, debuting promising youngster Piero Montecchi in the process.
1980s Players such as Rustichelli (now captain), Montecchi,
Fuss and
Zonta helped Pallacanestro Reggiana reach the professional ranks with a win in a promotion play-off played in
Udine over
Necchi Pavia that opened the gates of the second division
Serie A2 at the end of the 1981–82 with thousands of young supporters invading the basketball court to celebrate. President Enrico Prandi kept Gianni Zappi as coach and recruited Americans
Roosevelt Bouie and
Rudy Hackett, father of future Italian national team player
Daniel Hackett. These players, along with
Pino Brumatti among others under new coach
Gianfranco Lombardi, would help reach the Serie A anew. They would stay three seasons in the league, reaching the title playoffs in 1985–86 but going down the next season, with Montecchi leaving for
Olimpia Milano at the end of the season. Coach Piero Pasini ensured Reggio Emilia only stayed one year away and the team stayed in the Serie A over the following seasons which saw club great
Joe Bryant arrive (along with his future superstar son
Kobe, who played with the youth side).
1990s In 1990 the holding company was brought by Coopsette, with Sidis becoming the team sponsor, the ambitious club reached the
Italian Cup Final Four but struggled in the second part of the league season and was relegated. The 1992–93 preseason saw the arrival of a Pallacanestro Reggiana legend in
Mike Mitchell, who helped the club return to the elite. Two seasons later the club was back in the second division, following which it decided to bank on its young academy players such as
Alessandro Davoli and
Gianluca Basile. Returning to the Serie A in 1997, Reggio Emilia rehired Lombardi as coach, with a young
Max Menetti as assistant to guide a team containing players of the caliber of
Chris Jent,
Diego Pastori,
Marcelo Damiao, Gianluca Basile and the evergreen Mike Mitchell. Thereafter came a successful season that saw them reach the title playoffs, downing first
Milano (2–0) then in turn
Treviso (3–2) winning Game 4 at the buzzer and Game 5 at
PalaVerde without Mitchell to reach the semifinals where they exited at the hands of local rivals
Teamsystem Bologna. The result was nevertheless enough to send the Italian outfit to a European competition for the first time, in the
1998–99 Korać Cup. Losing Mitchell (now 41) to retirement and Basile to a transfer towards Fortitudo Bologna, they reached the round of 32 in Europe and stalled at the playoff eight finals, losing against
Pepsi Rimini. However, the next season ended in tears as Reggio Emilia were again relegated due to worst points difference than
Air Avellino; despite
Legabasket found irregularities in
Treviso's
Erazem Lorbek acquisition, the club was not readmitted in the First Division after a Tribunal court process only penalized Treviso record. They languished in the LegaDue in the subsequent years, exiting often in the playoffs.
2010s The club flirted with relegation during the 2010–11 season, saving their skin with a last game win over
Veroli combined with other results that saw
Scafati beating
Verona. In a complete turnaround in the 2011–12 season, the team led by
Massimiliano Menetti (who had previously become head coach) romped to a promotion that they confirmed with a game to spare against Imola, with a 20–8 record . On the domestic front they again reached the playoffs but were edged 2–3 by holders
Montepaschi Siena in their quarterfinal series, after a controversial defeat in a game 4 played at home with Reggio Emilia 2–1 at the time marked by bad refereeing. The next season saw the stages switched around, with Reggio Emilia jinxed by injuries underperforming in the
2014–15 EuroCup to exit the competition at the group stage with two wins in ten games. However, their league form proved more resilient as they regrouped from a March 68–118 demolition by Milano, finishing third at the end of the regular season. They would make their home advantage count in the quarterfinal series against
Enel Brindisi, winning game five at home to go through. The semifinals against
Umana Reyer Venezia had the team with their backs to the wall after a 67–89 defeat in game 5, but they won the next two games to progress to a first ever final. Against Italian Cup and
Supercup holders
Sassari, the first five games were split between respective home victories with Reggio Emilia favoured. They forced the sixth game in Sassari to three overtimes, with Cinciarini missing two title-winning shots in the dying moments of the fourth quarter, a three from
Achille Polonara followed by a steal and layup from
Rimantas Kaukėnas put them 5 ahead with seconds left in the first overtime but Sassari came back to force a second overtime, it went back and forth to finish tied and bring another overtime, in which Sassari pulled away for a win. Despite playing game 7 at home and racing into a 21–4 lead early on, Reggio Emilia could not find a response as Sassari gradually clawed back the lead before using a 12–0 fourth-quarter run to first tie then win a closely contested 73–75 game, denying the local fans the capture of a historic Serie A title. The next season Reggio Emilia won its first
Italian Supercup in
Turin, beating rivals
Sassari in the semifinals and
Milano led by former captain
Andrea Cinciarini in the final 80–68. The team managed also to reach the EuroCup Last 32, finishing third in its group with memorable victories over
ALBA Berlin,
MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg and
Le Mans Sarthe Basket; with an 11–4 record Grissin Bon finished the first round at the top of the table for the first time in its history. With the adds of
Vladimir Golubović (January) and
Derek Needham (May), the team finished the Regular Season ranked 2nd for the first time in its history, determining a rematch of the previous season Finals with 7th place
Dinamo Sassari with the likes of
David Logan,
Josh Akognon and former NBA prospect
Joe Alexander. After easily winning the first two home games led by
Pietro Aradori and
Amedeo Della Valle, Reggio completed the sweep by winning Game 3 in Sardinia, reaching the semifinals for the second consecutive season to meet with 3rd placed
Scandone Avellino. During the season, the Under–20 youth team had an unbeaten run at the Under–20 National Championship Finals, only to lose the Championship game 70–64 against underdogs
Pallacanestro Ferrara. In the playoff semifinals, Grissin Bon won the first two home games, but Avellino came back winning Game 3 and Game 4 with a 43 points margin, tying the series 2–2. After Reggio won Game 5 and Avellino Game 6, Grissin Bon won the decisive Game 7 in front of a sold out PalaBigi 85–80, reaching the second Playoffs final of its history. The series was marked by a disrespectful behaviour by both sets of fans: in Avellino
Amedeo Della Valle and
Achille Polonara were attacked with eggs by local fans, while in Game 5 Reggio's crowd repeatedly threw hygienic paper and match programmes into the court. Menetti's side lost Game 1 and Game 2 in
Milan against
Olimpia Milano, but managed to tie the series 2–2 by winning Game 3 and Game 4 at home. Milano eventually won Game 5 and Game 6 to win the title on Reggio's home court, where former captain Cinciarini was heavily booed. The 2016–17 season started with the retirement of Kaukenas and the departures of Lavrinovič, Siliņš and Veremeenko.
Delroy James and
Sava Lešić were the first signings in the summer, while center
Riccardo Cervi decided to return to the club after a season away with Avellino. Grissin Bon participated as title holders in the Italian Supercup Final Four, in Milan, but they were eliminated 74–72 in the semifinal by Avellino with a 3-point winning buzzer beater by
Joe Ragland. The campaign in the league started well, with a winning streak of 7 games from the 2nd to the 7th round, ended by a loss away to Varese in the 8th round, which opened a negative record of 2–6, ended by a home win over Brindisi the 6th of February 2017. However, the team managed to beat league favourites EA7 Milan in Bologna on the Boxing Day. Poor form of James and Lešić brought the management to wave them and acquire American rookie
Jalen Reynolds and former 2005 NCAA champion
Jawad Williams, while
Rimantas Kaukenas decided to come out of retirement. Reggio beat 4th seed Capo d'Orlando in the Quarter Finals of the Italian Cup Final Eight, held in Rimini, but were knocked out in the semis by Milan. The poor form of the team continued with three consecutive losses against Trento, Cantù and Avellino that led the management to take the team to a close training camp in Cesenatico for two consecutive weeks. However the team struggled to find chemistry and, despite the arrival of
Julian Wright from Trabzonspor for the playoffs, Grissin Bon were knocked out 3-0 in the first round by Avellino. The 2017 offseason saw captain
Pietro Aradori leaving for
Virtus Bologna with
Achille Polonara and
Andrea De Nicolao leaving the club too. The management decided to start a new project called #REstart, planning to rebuild the roster with young Italian players like
Federico Mussini, Leonardo Candi and Niccoló De Vico with the add ons of Garrett Nevels,
Mike Moser (later waived for physical problems),
Siim-Sander Vene (never played a game due to injury, left for Varese in January) and
Manuchar Markoishvili. However Grissin Bon had a negative 0-6 start, which had a huge impact in the missed qualification for the Final Eight despite the arrivals of
Chris Wright,
Pedro Llompart and
James White. The club's fortune appeared to be the EuroCup, a competition where Reggio advanced to the Top16 and won its group, advancing for the first time to the quarter finals where they clashed with
BC Zenit St. Petersburg In European competitions The club has participated in various European tournaments, winning the
FIBA EuroChallenge in 2014. ==Arena==