Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bnei Yehuda
Full name Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv
Football Club
Nickname(s) Ha'Sh'chuna (The Neighbourhood),
Ha'Zehuvim (The Goldens)
Founded 1936
Ground Bloomfield Stadium,
Tel Aviv-Jaffa, Israel
Capacity 20,000
Chairman Israel Hezi Magen
Manager Israel Nitzan Shirazi
League Ligat ha'Al
2005-06 Ligat ha'Al, 4th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

FC Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv (מועדון כדורגל בני יהודה תל אביב) is an israeli football club from the Tikvah neighbourhood (Shkhunat Hatikva שכונת התקוה in Hebrew), Tel Aviv's most notorious slum. The club was formed in January 1936 in south Tel-Aviv, by Nathan Sulami and his friends[1].

Contents

[edit] History

Since reaching Israel's top league, the National League (Liga Haleumit) in 1959, Bnei Yehuda has spent most of its history in this league, and its successor, the Premier League (Ligat Ha'al). However, it has been overshadowed by the two giants of Israeli sports in Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv, and usually been considered a bottomfeeding club.

In 1968 the club won the Israeli State Cup competition, the club's first title in its history. In 1981 they won the State Cup competition for the seconds time, under the guidance of the legendary Shlomo Sharf, who would go on to revolutionise Maccabi Haifa, creating the juggernaut that rules football in Israel today. In 1990, Bnei Yehuda won the National League Championship, under the guidance of Giora Shpigel and Rami Levi, and led by Israeli legend Moshe Sinai.

During the first years of the 1990s, the club maintained its role as a major competitor in the heights of Israel's top league, though could not defend its title as Israeli champion. Led by legends such as the "Aeroplane" Alon Mizrahi, Haim Revivo and Ukrainian Nikolai Kodritzki, the team was considered one of Israel's best offensive teams. On March 16, 1994, Kodritzki was killed in a car accident, while returning from viewing a friendly match between the Israeli and Ukrainian national football teams. After his death, the team faced a grave crisis, from which it recovered only years later.

During the end of the 1990s, the club fought for its position in the top league. In the last three seasons of the decade, the team was on the verge of being demoted, only to save itself from that fate in the last circle, three years in a row.

When the new decade came, Bnei Yehuda continued its decline. This time, it was unable to save itself, and in 2001 the club was demoted to the second league. Due to management changes, the team managed to promote back the following season. Since then, Bnei Yehuda has experienced a revival in its fortunes and popularity under the ownership of Hezi Magen, the Strauss Ice Cream Company sponsors, and managed by the young Nitzan Shirazi.

[edit] Fans and stadium

The club is mostly known for its fanatical fan base, which often makes more noise than the larger crowds that back Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem, and other clubs with a national fanbase. The sure stronghold of Hatikva assures them an audience when other clubs have watched theirs evaporate. Current stars include Nigerian national team goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama, former Maccabi veteran midfielders Eli Biton and Reuven Oved, Croat striker Mate Baturina, former Beitar Jerusalem striker Moshe Biton and homegrown midfielder Assi Baldut.

For most of its existence, the team has played at its own stadium in HaTikva neighborhood. In season 2004/05, the team moved their home matches to the Bloomfield Stadium in Jaffa, though the club offices, the team's practice grounds and most activities within the club are still held in the HaTikva stadium.

Aside from crosstown nemeses Maccabi and Hapoel (the latter is considered more bitter), Bnei Yehuda also have a deep enmity with Beitar Jerusalem, which has risen in the last years. However, veteran fans of Bnei Yehuda and Beitar consider this as a false statement, claiming that the opposite is true, and that a closeness between both fan bases is more evident through the history. In the broader picture, though, there is no one club that pairs with them in their rivalry, and most enthusiasts of Israeli football view them as mavericks due to the fans' hostile attitude, no matter which opponent is on the grass with them. The fact that Bnei Yehuda lags behind Hapoel and Maccabi in respect to facilities, budget, and fanbase has translated into a smaller youth program than the other two, though in the premier league they have often finished higher than both of them.


[edit] Trophies

Championship
1 (1989-90)
National Cup
2 (1968, 1981)
Toto Cup
2 (1992, 1997)

[edit] Current first team squad

As of April 28, 2006

No. Position Player
1 Nigeria GK Vincent Enyeama
2 Israel DF Itzik Azuz
3 Israel DF Salem Abu Siam
7 Croatia MF Hervoje Kovacevic
8 Israel MF Assi Baldut
10 Israel DF Eli Abarbanel
11 Israel FW Lior Asulin
12 Israel DF Yaniv Elul
13 Croatia MF Mate Baturina
14 Israel MF Eliran Attar
15 Israel DF Yair Azoulai
No. Position Player
17 Israel MF Kobi Dajani
18 Israel MF Reuven Oved
20 Israel DF Yaniv Bason
22 Israel GK Yahav Youlzari
23 Israel DF Asi Domb
24 Israel MF Eli Biton
25 Israel MF Dor Halevi
27 Israel MF Oz Reali
28 Ghana MF Imoro Lukman
29 Israel FW Barak Badash

[edit] Squad changes for 2006/07 season

In
Out
Other
  • Croatia Mario Lucic signed from Dinamo Zagreb before the start of the season, but was released shortly after its beginning.

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv Official Website. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Retrieved on 2006-09-02.

[edit] External links


Israeli Premier League Clubs Israel
FC Ashdod | Beitar Jerusalem | Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv | Hapoel Kfar Saba | Hapoel Petah Tikva | Hapoel Tel Aviv | Hakoah Ramat Gan | Maccabi Haifa | Maccabi Herzliya | Maccabi Netanya | Maccabi Petah Tikva | Maccabi Tel Aviv
edit this box
In other languages