Menu

Today's Matches

Live scores, upcoming kick-offs, and finished results for today. Data refreshes automatically so you never miss a moment.

Upcoming Today

1 match

Standings

LBF W · 2026

Current LBF W 2026 standings with 10 teams. Sampaio W leads the table with 17 points after 18 matches, followed by Campinas W on 15 points. The table shows wins, losses, scoring, and win percentage — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonLostPoints For:Points AgainstPoint Diff
1Sampaio W181711426:933+493
2Campinas W181531443:1168+275
3SESI Araraquara W181351191:1057+134
4Cerrado W181351443:1137+306
5Santo Andre W181081347:1255+92
6Sao Jose W188101132:1129+3
7Sodie Mesquita W187111243:1370-127
8Maringa W183151032:1258-226
9Recife W183151038:1353-315
10Salvador W18117924:1559-635

Results

LBF W · 50
Quarter-finals18/06/2026–25/06/2026
Thu 25/06
Match Details
Tue 23/06
Match Details
Mon 22/06
Match Details
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
Match Details
Thu 18/06
Match Details
Thu 18/06
Match Details
Results28/05/2026–11/06/2026
Thu 11/06
Match Details
Thu 11/06
Match Details
Wed 10/06
Match Details
Wed 10/06
Match Details
Sun 07/06
Match Details
Sun 07/06
Match Details
Sun 07/06
Match Details
Sat 06/06
Match Details
Fri 05/06
Match Details
Thu 04/06
Match Details
Tue 02/06
Match Details
Tue 02/06
Match Details
Sun 31/05
Match Details
Fri 29/05
Match Details
Fri 29/05
Match Details
Thu 28/05
Match Details
Thu 28/05
Match Details

Upcoming Fixtures

1 match
Campinas W
Sodie Mesquita W

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 10 teams in the LBF W. Sampaio W leads with 17 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, scoring, scoring difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scoring Teams

Team#PlayedWonLostPoints ForPoints Against
Sampaio W1181711426933
Campinas W21815314431168
SESI Araraquara W31813511911057
Cerrado W41813514431137
Santo Andre W51810813471255
Sao Jose W61881011321129
Sodie Mesquita W71871112431370
Maringa W81831510321258
Recife W91831510381353
Salvador W10181179241559

Past Seasons

LBF W

Browse 12 archived seasons of the LBF W, from 2014-2015 to 2026. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 19 Mar 2026

Founded2010

The Liga de Basquete Feminino was established in May 2010 with an ambitious mission to promote and develop women's basketball in Brazil following decades of national team success, including Brazil's historic 1994 FIBA World Championship victory. The league emerged as a response to the absence of a structured professional pathway for female athletes, which had contributed to the decline of the Brazilian national team despite the country's previous dominance in international competition. Since its inception, the LBF has expanded and contracted in team numbers, reflecting the evolving economic landscape of Brazilian women's sports. The competition has been marked by the emergence of dominant clubs such as Americana, Sampaio Basquete, SESI Araraquara, and Corinthians, each contributing to the league's competitive balance and growth. In recent years, the league has strengthened its commercial profile through title sponsorship agreements with CAIXA, the state-run lottery company, and broadcast partnerships with TV Cultura, increasing visibility and investment in the women's game.

  • 2010 — Liga de Basquete Feminino officially founded in May as Brazil's premier women's basketball league
  • 2012 — Americana emerges as early powerhouse, winning first of five titles in the 2010s
  • 2016 — Sampaio Basquete joins the league and begins sustained period of dominance
  • 2018 — Campinas W wins championship, signalling competitive parity among top clubs
  • 2023 — SESI Araraquara captures first of three consecutive titles, establishing new dynasty
  • 2025 — League reaches 11-team format with CAIXA sponsorship strengthening commercial foundation

Competition Format 19 Mar 2026

Teams11

The LBF operates as a home-and-away round-robin competition across 11 teams, with each club playing 20 matches during the regular season. Clubs earn two points for a win and one point for a loss, with the champion determined by the highest points total at season's conclusion. The league features a playoff structure where the top-finishing teams advance to knockout rounds to determine the ultimate champion. This format ensures that both regular-season consistency and playoff performance contribute to the final outcome, creating opportunities for clubs to secure titles through sustained excellence or late-season surges.

Records 19 Mar 2026

Most titlesAmericana (5)

The 2024/25 season produced 1,081 total goals across all matches, demonstrating the high-scoring nature of women's basketball in Brazil.

Analysis 19 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

Sampaio Basquete W dominated the 2024/25 regular season standings, finishing atop the 11-team table with an impressive 18 wins and just 2 losses across 20 matches, accumulating 1,663 points for and 1,255 against for a commanding +408 goal difference. The club's 90% win rate positioned them as overwhelming favourites heading into the playoffs, with their nearest challengers trailing significantly. SESI Araraquara W and Corinthians W both secured 15 wins from 20 matches, trailing Sampaio by three wins, though both clubs demonstrated the competitive depth that has characterized recent LBF seasons. The gap between the top three clubs and the remainder of the field proved substantial, with Ourinhos W in fourth place managing 12 wins, suggesting Sampaio's dominance was exceptional even by the standards of a competitive league.

The title race between Sampaio and the chasing pack revealed the sustained excellence required to win in the LBF. Sampaio's +408 goal difference far exceeded SESI Araraquara's +276 and Corinthians' +274, indicating not merely that Sampaio won more games, but that they did so with greater consistency and margin of victory. This statistical dominance historically translates to playoff success, though basketball's inherent unpredictability means playoff tournaments can produce surprises. The regular season suggested Sampaio possessed superior depth, defensive cohesion, and scoring firepower compared to their rivals, with their ability to control games evident in both home and away performances.

The relegation battle at the bottom of the standings proved far more dramatic, with Maringa W and Blumenau W struggling significantly. Maringa finished with a catastrophic 1 win from 20 matches and a -467 goal difference, the worst record in the league by a considerable margin. Blumenau fared marginally better with 2 wins, though their -325 goal difference indicated persistent defensive vulnerabilities. Santo Andre W occupied the precarious ninth position with 6 wins and 14 losses, placing them at genuine risk should playoff eliminations occur. These struggling clubs faced the challenge of competing against increasingly professionalized opponents while operating with substantially smaller budgets and less developed player development infrastructure.

Crawford emerged as the season's standout individual performer, averaging 26.5 points per match to lead all scorers across the league. This exceptional scoring output demonstrated the calibre of international talent attracted to the LBF, as foreign players continue to supplement Brazilian rosters. Crawford's scoring prowess, combined with Vitória's dominance on the glass with 14.0 rebounds per match and Joice's playmaking excellence with 12.0 assists, illustrated the multifaceted skill sets required to excel in modern women's basketball. These individual performances underscored the league's technical sophistication and the quality of competition that the LBF has cultivated over its fifteen-year history.

The 2024/25 season witnessed an unexpected narrative surrounding the playoff format and championship implications. Sampaio's regular season dominance contrasted sharply with the unpredictability inherent in knockout competitions, where momentum, matchup advantages, and individual performances can override regular season records. SESI Araraquara's three consecutive titles (2023, 2024, 2025 seasons) created the possibility of a historic three-peat being disrupted, adding dramatic tension to the postseason. The presence of multiple clubs capable of competing for the championship—Sampaio, SESI Araraquara, and Corinthians all possessed legitimate claims—ensured that the playoff tournament would determine the ultimate champion rather than the regular season's conclusive verdict.

League Structure and Competitive Landscape

The LBF's evolution into an 11-team competition reflects the consolidation and professionalization of Brazilian women's basketball. The league operates with a home-and-away format, ensuring that every club plays every other club twice—once at home and once away—creating a 20-match regular season that tests consistency across the calendar year. This format has proven effective in identifying the strongest clubs while maintaining competitive balance, as evidenced by the varying champions across the league's history. The 2-point-for-a-win system (as opposed to the 3-point system used in some leagues) creates different strategic incentives, with clubs unable to accumulate insurmountable leads through a single victory, thereby preserving the competitive viability of multiple teams throughout the season.

The playoff system represents a significant departure from simple regular-season determination of the champion. By requiring top-finishing clubs to compete in knockout rounds, the LBF ensures that the final champion possesses not merely consistency but also the ability to perform under pressure when elimination is at stake. This format has historically produced champions from across the competitive spectrum, with clubs that finished second or third in the regular season occasionally capturing the title through superior playoff performances. The structure has contributed to the league's dramatic appeal and has prevented any single club from dominating the competition so thoroughly that predictability undermines fan engagement.

International Context and Player Development

The LBF operates within Brazil's broader basketball ecosystem, serving as the primary professional pathway for female athletes before they pursue opportunities in European leagues or the WNBA. The presence of international players—particularly those from the United States and Europe—has elevated the technical quality of competition while providing Brazilian players with daily exposure to world-class talent. This internationalization has contributed to the league's competitive standard rising substantially since 2010, with modern LBF teams employing sophisticated offensive systems and defensive schemes that rival many European leagues.

The league's relationship with the Brazilian national team remains complex. While the LBF provides the primary source of domestic talent for the national program, the federation's historical underfunding and mismanagement have limited the national team's ability to compete at the highest international levels. Recent improvements in LBF infrastructure and commercial investment suggest that the domestic league may finally provide the sustained development pathway that the national team requires to reclaim its position among the world's elite women's basketball nations.

Commercial Development and Media Presence

CAIXA's title sponsorship has transformed the LBF's commercial landscape, providing clubs with more substantial revenue streams and enabling investment in player salaries, facilities, and marketing. The partnership between the league and TV Cultura ensures domestic broadcast coverage, while the emergence of LBF LIVE as a streaming platform has expanded the league's reach beyond traditional television audiences. These developments represent significant progress from the league's early years, when financial precarity threatened the viability of numerous clubs.

The 2024/25 season generated 1,081 goals across all matches, a testament to the high-scoring, entertaining basketball that characterizes the LBF. This offensive orientation appeals to casual fans while showcasing the technical proficiency of modern players. The league's ability to produce consistent, competitive matches with multiple teams capable of winning on any given night has contributed to growing fan engagement and media interest, positioning the LBF as an increasingly important property within Brazilian sports media.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the LBF?

Eleven clubs currently compete in the Liga de Basquete Feminino regular season, each playing 20 matches during the campaign.

Who has won the most LBF titles?

Americana has won the most LBF championships with five titles, won between 2011 and 2018. SESI Araraquara has captured three consecutive titles from 2023 to 2025.

When was the LBF founded?

The Liga de Basquete Feminino was officially founded in May 2010 as Brazil's premier professional women's basketball league.

How does the LBF playoff system work?

The top-finishing clubs from the 20-match regular season advance to playoff rounds where teams compete in knockout matches to determine the league champion.

Is there relegation in the LBF?

No, the LBF does not feature a relegation system. All clubs that compete in a season remain in the league for the following season.

Who is the current title sponsor of the LBF?

CAIXA Lotteries holds the title sponsorship rights to the league, which is officially known as LBF CAIXA.

API data: 27 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 19 Mar 2026