| Basketball Champions League | 01/06 16:30 | 14 |
Baskets Wuerzburg vs
Patrioti Levice
|
- | View | |
| Basketball Champions League Qual | 01/08 17:00 | 14 |
Patrioti Levice
vs
S.Oliver Wurzburg
|
- | View | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 01/11 15:30 | 15 |
SC Vechta
vs
S.Oliver Wurzburg
|
- | View | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 01/17 17:30 | 16 |
Brose Bamberg
vs
S.Oliver Wurzburg
|
- | View | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 01/25 14:00 | 17 |
Bayern Munich
vs
S.Oliver Wurzburg
|
- | View | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 02/01 15:30 | 18 |
S.Oliver Wurzburg vs
Brose Bamberg
|
- | View |
| Germany Bundesliga | 01/02 19:00 | 14 |
[2] Baskets Wuerzburg v
Hamburg Towers
[17]
|
W | 91-88 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 12/29 17:30 | 13 |
[6] Ratiopharm Ulm
v
Baskets Wuerzburg [2]
|
L | 66-61 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 12/26 17:30 | 12 |
[3] Baskets Wuerzburg v
Trier
[2]
|
W | 102-83 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 12/21 14:00 | 11 |
[4] Baskets Wuerzburg v
Syntainics MBC
[3]
|
W | 89-71 | |
| Basketball Champions League | 12/17 17:30 | 6 |
[3] Trieste
v
Baskets Wuerzburg [2]
|
W | 77-90 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 12/12 19:00 | 10 |
[14] Chemnitz 99
v
Baskets Wuerzburg [5]
|
W | 67-86 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 12/05 19:00 | 9 |
[7] Baskets Wuerzburg v
Oldenburg
[17]
|
W | 82-71 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 11/22 17:30 | 8 |
[8] Frankfurt Skyliners
v
Baskets Wuerzburg [4]
|
L | 82-80 | |
| Basketball Champions League | 11/19 18:00 | 5 |
[4] Igokea
v
Baskets Wuerzburg [3]
|
W | 56-85 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 11/09 17:00 | 7 |
[3] Baskets Wuerzburg v
Rostock Seawolves
[13]
|
L | 63-75 | |
| Basketball Champions League | 11/04 17:30 | 4 |
[2] Baskets Wuerzburg v
Galatasaray
[1]
|
L | 74-99 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 10/31 19:00 | 6 |
[3] Baskets Wuerzburg v
Jena
[12]
|
W | 97-92 |
Fitness First Würzburg Baskets (formerly known as Würzburg Baskets and s.Oliver Baskets) is a German professional basketball club located in Würzburg. After one year of absence from the Basketball Bundesliga (BBL), the club returned to the first division of German basketball in the 2015–16 season.
It was founded in 2007, with the aim to substitute the original club of the city, who was known as DJK Würzburg, which stood for "Deutsche Jugendkraft" (German youth power), and was affiliated to the DJK-Sportverband (Sport Association), which is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church in Germany. The club has gained fame through its basketball department, in which NBA players Dirk Nowitzki and Maxi Kleber got their starts.
The DJK Sport Association was founded on 16 September 1920 in Würzburg. Due to the geographic location of its home office, the DJK soon founded a local club in Würzburg. However, the different athletic departments found themselves divided among various Catholic clubs. During the Third Reich, all DJK affiliates were banned by the government. After World War II, the DJK consolidated all of its local departments into DJK Würzburg. Today the club has over 3000 members, including a variety of non-Catholic members.
The club's top women's handball team played in the Handball-Bundesliga Frauen, the top flight of women's handball in Germany, from 1976 to 1985, during the 1987–88 season and from 1993 to 1995.
The club's basketball department gained fame in the 1990s as both the men's and women's teams qualified for the top German Basketball Bundesliga (BBL) division. The women's team played many years in the first and second divisions and was crowned German Champion in 1993. In 1989, the men's team made the jump into the second division. In 1997, featuring Dirk Nowitzki in the line-up, DJK Würzburg claimed the 2nd Division South title, qualifying for the Basketball Bundesliga. In 2001, DJK spun off its men's basketball team into a private corporate entity, now known as the Würzburg Baskets, to capitalise on their growth as a professional basketball team. DJK Würzburg has produced numerous players who have gone on to have success in the BBL, with the senior Germany national team, and for Nowitzki, as well as the NBA.
In 2005, the club resigned its spot in the BBL and the club stopped competing.
In 2007, American businessman Jochen Bähr acquired a license in the Regional league for a new team in Würzburg with the aim to reach the Pro A in few seasons.
In 2011, the Würzburg Baskets, now by the name of s.Oliver Baskets (after their new sponsor s.Oliver), gained promotion from the PRO A (German Second Division), and moved up to the Basketball Bundesliga (German First Division). In its first season back in the first division, in 2011–12, the team reached the German League semi-finals, after beating Alba Berlin by 3–1 in the quarter-final series of the playoffs. In 2012–13 the actual club played in Europe for the first time, in the second tier Eurocup. In 2013–14 they relegated from the BBL. They immediately promoted back to the first tier in the 2014–15 season. In the 2015–16 season, the team finished ranked in the top 8, thus qualifying for the playoffs for the second time after 2012. In quarter-finals the team was eliminated by future league champion Brose Baskets, losing every game with at least a 35-point margin.
On 15 July 2016 the team changed their name from "s.Oliver Baskets" to "s.Oliver Würzburg" to strengthen the identification of team and city. Additionally, the sponsoring contract with s.Oliver was extended through 2019.
In the 2018–19 season, Würzburg played in the FIBA Europe Cup. Würzburg reached the finals of the cup, its first European finals, in which it lost to Dinamo Sassari over two legs.
During the 2024–25 season, FIT/ONE Würzburg Baskets participated in the Basketball Champions League (BCL) for the first time. They started the regular season in Group A with three other teams: Nanterre 92 from France, Hapoel Holon from Israel, and Igokea from Bosnia and Herzegovina.
On 10 July 2024, the team changed their name from "Würzburg Baskets" to "FIT/One Würzburg Baskets" because of the new name sponsor FIT/One, who is located in the fitness scene. On 1 August 2025, as FIT/One has been joined to Fitness First group, the club name changed to "Fitness First Würzburg Baskets".