With the continuity of work, the team, led at the time by José Roberto Lux, reached the 4th position in the 2005 Brazilian Basketball Championship.
Officially, the Brazilian Championship 2006 has not even ended because the team from Brasilia filed an injunction in court claiming that one player from the Telemar Rio de Janeiro was playing irregularly hexagonal, which defined the finalists.
The team's greatest run was possible thanks to the arrival of a group of former players COC/Ribeirao Preto, such as Nezinho, Alex Garcia, Arthur, Márcio Cipriano and Alirio.
And in the final of the Championship that year, led by José Carlos Vidal, they won the national title over the traditional team of Franca.
With the change, they left Valtinho and Estevam, who were defending the colors of the new team, while the coach Lula Ferreira was replaced by Jose Carlos Vidal.
The team was eliminated in the quarter-finals of NBB5 by São José losing the series by 3–2 with a painful defeat in the fifth game in full Nilson Nelson.
With Hernandez at charge, the team was champion of his second South American League,[4] but it was not beyond the quarter-finals in NBB6, falling again facing São José, for 3–0.
For the 2015–16 season, the Uniceub/BRB/Brasilia maintained the base of the previous year and invested in hiring young promises of Brazilian basketball, such as Deryk Ramos and Jefferson Campos.
With a more balanced bench, allowing greater rotation during the games, the team won its third South American League,[5] becoming the biggest winner of the competition, alongside Atenas de Córdoba (ARG).
Continuing the renewal of the cast, the Uniceub/BRB/Brasilia hired two promising young pivots for the season 2016–17: Lucas Mariano, with games for the Brazilian National Team, and Fab Melo, with experience in the NBA.