Amit Ben Shushan

Amit Ben Shushan
Personal information
Full name Amit Ben Shushan
Date of birth March 20, 1985 (1985-03-20) (age 26)
Place of birth Jerusalem, Israel
Playing position Striker / Winger
Club information
Current club Beitar Jerusalem
Number 7
Youth career
2000–04 Beitar Jerusalem
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2004-present Beitar Jerusalem 160 (26)
National team
2005–2007 Israel U-21 9 (1)
2006–present Israel 12 (2)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 1 May 2010.

† Appearances (Goals).

‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 14 September 2008

Amit Ben Shushan (Hebrew: עמית בן שושן‎; born March 20, 1985 in Jerusalem) is an Israeli football player. He has been playing for Beitar Jerusalem since Youth level.

Ben Shushan can play as a striker or as a supporting forward on the wing.

He made a name for himself after his series of goals during Beitar's Intertoto campaign in 2005.

He made his debut for the Israel national football team vs Estonia on September 2, 2006 when he came in as a sub for fellow team-mate Michael Zandberg. In the next match vs Andorra he played for 90 minutes scoring his first senior goal for his country and assisting for 2 more goals. On October 7, Ben Shushan scored Israel's only goal in the away match against Russia securing a draw that could have turned vital for Israel.

Ben Shushan is part of a group of young players who helped transform Beitar Jerusalem's youth into a leading Israeli soccer academy. At the time he joined Beitar, city rival Hapoel Jerusalem was still the leading youth team in Jerusalem. Despite living less than 200 meters away from Hapoel Jerusalem's training facility in Kiryat-Hayovel, Ben Shushan opted for Beitar and has never looked back since.

After the Israeli Cup Final in June 2009, he sang a racist song in front of thousands of club fans, an incident which was recorded on television. The words included, "I hate you Salim Toama, I hate all the Arabs," part of a popular chant sung by Beitar fans.[1]

References