Great players and coaches wore the blue and gold jersey before and/or after representing the National Basketball Team and even playing in the major leagues in Europe and the NBA.
On 27 November 1938 Boca Juniors played United States' team Amateur Athletic Union at the Luna Park of Buenos Aires.
The line-up was José Giuliano, Víctor Di Vita, Pedro Aizcorbe, Carlos Stropiana y Roberto Contini.
[b] To form a more competitive team, Boca hired Rosarian players Enrique Borda and Bernardo Schime, then acquiring Rubén Petrilli.
Under his coaching, Boca Juniors achieved its most significant success, winning during 3 consecutive years (1961, 1962 and 1963) all the tournaments disputed: the Oficial, Apertura and Metropolitano championships.
[1][2] Boca played the 1984 season, the last before the creation of Liga Nacional de Básquet, although the severe crisis of the club by then caused the team went off the competition few days before the beginning of the tournament.
At the top level again, in 1996 Boca Juniors inaugurated its first stadium built specifically for the practise of basketball, then named "Luis Conde" (mostly known as "La Bombonerita") in honour of a recently dead manager of the club.
The team roster was: Byron Wilson, Jerome Mincy, Ariel Bernardini, Luis Villar, Sebastián Festa, Gabriel Fernández, Claudio Farabello, Gustavo Fernández, Diego Prego, Claudio Chiappero, Sebastián Acosta, Esteban Acosta, Fernando Oyarzún and Ariel Eslava.
Apart from the domestic league, Boca disputed the Copa Argentina de Básquetbol, winning the title in 2002 (inaugural season), 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006 (five consecutive times).
For the 2009–10 season , Boca Juniors is going through a series of economic difficulties that force the institution to drastically reduce the budget allocated annually to the development of basketball activity in the club.
However, the board of directors manages to sign an agreement with the airline Aerochaco that allows it to obtain the money necessary to maintain the seat, and to finance the activity of the professional team.
In addition, he signed an agreement with the president of the Club Atlético Sarmiento de Resistencia (Chaco), Jorge Capitanich, by which the team would move its home to the basketball stadium of the Chaco institution, in addition to changing the Boca Juniors team name for Aerochaco Boca.
They achieved an important fourth place, after being eliminated in the semifinals against Peñarol de Mar del Plata by 3–0, exceeding expectations prior to the start of the tournament.
The team did not find answers and wandered in the lower part of the table, finally finishing in 17th place, with 13 games won and 17 lost.
This forced the team to play a best-of-5 tie to avoid relegation to the second category of the league against the Argentino de Junín, last classified in the regular phase.
After the club's presidential elections in 2019, where Jorge Ameal won, it opted to maintain professional basketball, deciding to invest in the section.
The fifth game would be at the Instituto stadium, where after losing by 13 points at halftime, they would win the match 75–72, reaching a new final of the National Basketball League after 16 years.
The renovation of the stadium, according to the head of the club basketball, was inspired by the Roberto Pando Sports Center, and consisted of replacing the game field, with FIBA certification; a 5700K LED projector lighting system; a reconditioning of changing rooms, offices, entrances and exterior, in addition to the installation of central air conditioning.