[:en]Blu Basket Treviglio 1971
Treviglio Basket was founded in 1971, but despite its young age, it has already earned a prominent position on the national scene. Founded within the OratoRio Salesiano, under the name Or.Sa Treviglio, quickly advanced, reaching Serie B in 1982. In 1986, a merger with Osio Sotto gave birth to a new club: Bergamasca Country Basket Treviglio. After four consecutive unsuccessful playoff appearances, in the 1993/94 season, they won Serie B d'Eccellenza in Modena, against Campi Bisenzio.
The youth sector has always been the club's flagship, a sector that has seen the likes of Alberto Rossini (playmaker for the national team), Marco Sambugaro (Italian champion with Siena), Andrea Conti (European Cadet champion), and Luca Gamba (Military World Champion), all of whom have gone on to reach Serie A. This sector continues to provide tremendous success, not least because it includes Codevilla, Degli Agosti, Brioschi, Guerci, and Colonnello, to name just a few. Its most prestigious achievement came in 1995, when it finished second overall behind Virtus Bologna in the Allievi Nazionali finals. The Cadets, Juniors, and Under-20s have often reached the final stages of their respective championships.
In the 1999/2000 season, the club changed its name again, returning to simply Treviglio Basket, following a desire expressed by many to emphasize the basketball tradition in the capital of the lower Bergamo area. It twice narrowly missed promotion to Legadue, reaching the playoff semifinals, losing first to Cento and then, last year, to Trapani. In the 2005/2006 season, it reached the Legadue Finals, losing only to the strong SparScavolini Pesaro, after defeating highly-rated Brindisi and Patti.
In the summer of 2006, the company changed its name, becoming a Limited Liability Amateur Company, after expanding its shareholding structure to include other entrepreneurs and changing its name (from Treviglio Basket to Blu Basket) to embark on an ambitious new project. In July 2011, the presidency passed from PierVincenzo Mazza to GianFranco Testa.