Brindisi had in the past been represented by Libertas Brindisi, which played during the '70 and the season 1981–82 in the first division and spent nine others in the second division around the same period (including a few with local great Elio Pentassuglia as coach). That side would fold in 1987 whilst another local side,
Azzurra Brindisi, played a few seasons in the third division during the 1990s before itself disappearing in 2001. The city was left without a representative in the national divisions, in the meantime, New Basket Ceglie – based in nearby
Ceglie Messapica since its 1992 foundation – had been promoted to the fourth division Serie B but was hampered by the lack of a suitable arena in the town (the local Palazzetto dello sport only seating 500). Ceglie then moved to Brindisi's PalaPentassuglia arena that same summer, however the team didn't draw the local public and was sold to Giovanni Di Bella at the end of the season, with the new owner making the move to the city permanent. Also in 2002, Massimo Ferrarese started sponsoring the club under his company's Prefabbricati Pugliesi brand, two years he would buy out Di Bella (who was planning on selling the club to a team in another city) to become the sole owner of the club and form New Basket Brindisi in the process, with Antonio Codiano as its president. On the court, Brindisi won the Serie B2 regular season and reached the promotion playoffs final as favourites, however they lost the series against Ribera after being beaten 71–104 in the decisive game on 25 May 2005. The next season saw a team led by Uruguayan
Alejandro Muro win the regular season but lose in the playoff quarterfinals to
Veroli. After a transitional season, Brindisi, coached by promotion specialist
Giovanni Perdichizzi, won the 2009–10 LegaDue regular season to move up to the first division
Serie A. The team did not manage to stay in the elite as they were relegated at the end of a season that saw a lot of roster changes, including Perdichizzi's replacement by
Luca Bechi. The team had earlier won the
LegaDue Cup by beating
Fileni BPA Jesi 77-74 in the final. Its second season in the elite proved better than the first as Brindisi, led by
Jonathan Gibson and
Jeff Viggiano, qualified for the mid-season
Italian Cup final eight and seemed a sure bet for the playoffs before losing ten of its last eleven regular season games to finish twelfth, a position that comfortably guaranteed its Serie A place. The 2013–14 season proved even better, the club finished the first stage of the season in first place (tied on 22 points with
Cantù but above on head-to-head record) to again qualify for the Italian Cup. The 2014–15 season saw the Italian side make its European debut in the third tier
EuroChallenge, going all the way to the
quarterfinals before getting knocked out by
Nanterre. Brindisi received a wild card to be admitted to the European second-tier
2015–16 Eurocup. ==Arena==