hidden pixel

Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv F.c. Information

Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv F.C. (Hebrew: מועדון כדורגל בני יהודה תל אביב‎, Moadon Kaduregel Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv), commonly known as just Bnei Yehuda, is an Israeli football club from the Hatikva Quarter of Tel Aviv. The club is currently a member of the Israeli Premier League and plays its home matches at Bloomfield Stadium.

Contents

History

The club was formed in January 1936 by Nathan Sulami and his friends.[1] They were first promoted to the top division in 1959. Two seasons later they narrowly avoided relegation, finishing second from bottom. In 1965 the club reached the State Cup final for the first time, but lost 2–1 to Maccabi Tel Aviv.[2] In 1968 they reached the final again, this time beating Hapoel Petah Tikva to claim their first piece of major silverware.

After several near-misses, the club was relegated at the end of the 1971–72 season after finishing second from bottom. However, they made an immediate return as Liga Alef champions but were relegated again in 1976. In the 1977–78 season the club were promoted back to the top division as Liga Artzit champions, and also reached the State Cup final, where they lost 2–1 to Maccabi Netanya. The following season the club finished fourth in Liga Leumit.

The 1980–81 season was the club's best so far. Managed by Shlomo Sharf they finished second in the league and reached the cup final again, this time beating Hapoel Tel Aviv 4–3 after a penalty shootout. However, the success was not maintained, and they were relegated at the end of the 1983–84 season.

The club made an immediate return as Liga Artzit champions and finished second in 1986–87. The 1989–90 season saw the club win its first, and to date only, championship under the leadership of Giora Spiegel. Two seasons later they won the Toto Cup for the first time, repeating the feat in 1997.

The 2000–01 season saw Bnei Yehuda finish second from bottom of the Premier League (which had replaced Liga Leumit as the top division) and the club was relegated. However, they made an immediate return as Liga Leumit runners-up.[3] The club have remained in the Premier League since. In 2005–06 they reached the cup final, losing 1–0 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, but also qualifying for Europe for the first time. In the 2006–07 UEFA Cup they lost 6–0 on aggregate to Lokomotiv Sofia and had to play their home match in Senec in Slovakia due to security concerns.[4]

In the 2009–10 season Bnei Yehuda reached the Europa League play-off, after starting in the first qualifying round, but lost to PSV 2–0 on aggregate. the following season they reached the second qualifying round of the Europa League, but lost to Shamrock Rovers.

Stadium

For most of its existence, Bnei Yehuda played at the Hatikva Neighborhood Stadium in the Hatikva Quarter of Tel Aviv. However, in 2004 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.

European Cups History

UEFA Cup / Europa League:

Season Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
2006–07 Q2 Lokomotiv Sofia 0–2 0–4 0–6
2009–10 Q1 Simurq PFC 3–0 1–0 4–0
Q2 Dinaburg Daugavpils 4–0 1–0 5–0
Q3 Paços Ferreira 1–0 1–0 2–0
Play-off PSV 0–1 0–1 0–2
2010–11 Q1 Ulisses 1–0 0–0 1–0
Q2 Shamrock Rovers 1–1 0–1 1–2
2011–12 Q2 UE Sant Julià 2–0 2–0 4–0
Q3 Helsingborgs IF 1–0 0-3 1-3

Current squad

As of 29 December, 2010

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 GK Dele Aiyenugba
4 DF Dan Mori
6 DF Gal Cohen
7 MF Oz Raly
8 FW Dino Ndlovu
9 MF George Imses
10 MF Ben Yosef Zairi
11 FW Pini Balili
12 MF Yisrael Zaguri
13 DF Nizan Aharonovich
14 MF Amir Agajev
15 MF Hasan Abu-Zaid
16 MF Kęstutis Ivaškevičius
No. Position Player
17 DF Itzik Azuz
18 MF Lior Bargig
19 FW Nenad Marinković
20 MF Pedro Galván
21 DF Aviv Hadad
22 GK Tom Almadon
23 MF Kfir Edri (captain)
25 MF Shlomi Levi
26 MF Shalev Menashe
27 FW Gil Itzhak
29 MF Stav Finish
33 GK Itamar Israeli

Honours

References

  1. ^ Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv Official Website. "Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv". http://www.fc-bnei-yehuda.co.il/cgi-bin/SheepWool/sheepwool.pl?act=view&wiki=7137418. Retrieved 2009-07-03.
  2. ^ Israel – List of Cup Finals RSSSF
  3. ^ Israel Second Level 2001–02 RSSSF
  4. ^ Slovakia to stage Israeli UEFA tie CNN, 3 August 2006

External links

2011–12 UEFA Europa League
Playing in the round of 32 Ajax · Anderlecht · Athletic Bilbao · Atlético Madrid · AZ · Beşiktaş · Braga · Club Brugge · Hannover 96 · Lazio · Legia Warsaw · Lokomotiv Moscow · Manchester City · Manchester United · Metalist Kharkiv · Olympiacos · PAOK · Porto · PSV Eindhoven · Red Bull Salzburg · Rubin Kazan · Schalke 04 · Sporting CP · Standard Liège · Steaua București · Stoke City · Trabzonspor · Twente · Udinese · Valencia · Viktoria Plzeň · Wisła Kraków
Eliminated in the group stage AEK Athens · AEK Larnaca · Austria Wien · Birmingham City · Celtic · Copenhagen · Dynamo Kyiv · Fulham · Hapoel Tel Aviv · Maccabi Haifa · Maccabi Tel Aviv · Malmö FF · Maribor · Odense · Paris Saint-Germain · Rapid București · Rennes · Shamrock Rovers · Slovan Bratislava · Sturm Graz · Tottenham Hotspur · Vaslui · Vorskla Poltava · Zürich
Eliminated in the play-off round Aalesund · Alania Vladikavkaz · Bursaspor · CSKA Sofia · Differdange 03 · Dinamo Bucureşti · Dinamo Tbilisi · Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk · Ekranas · Gaz Metan Mediaș · Heart of Midlothian · Helsingborg · HJK Helsinki · Karpaty Lviv · Litex Lovech · Nacional · Nordsjælland · Omonia · Panathinaikos · Partizan · Rabotnički · Rangers · Red Star Belgrade · Ried · Roma · Rosenborg · Sevilla · Sion · Śląsk Wrocław · Sochaux · Sparta Prague · Spartak Moscow · Spartak Trnava · Thun · Vitória Guimarães · Young Boys · Zestafoni
Eliminated in the third qualifying round ADO Den Haag · Aktobe · Anorthosis · Bnei Yehuda · Brøndby · Elfsborg · Gaziantepspor · Gomel · Häcken · Hajduk Split · Jablonec · KR · Levski Sofia · Lokomotiv Sofia · Mainz 05 · Metalurgi Rustavi · Midtjylland · Mladá Boleslav · Olimpija Ljubljana · Olympiacos Volou · Paks · Palermo · Qarabağ · Sarajevo · Senica · Sligo Rovers · Split · St Patrick's Athletic · Strømsgodset · Vaduz · Vålerenga · Varaždin · Ventspils · Vllaznia Shkodër · Westerlo · Željezničar
Eliminated in the second qualifying round Bohemians · Crusaders · Dundee United · Domžale · EB/Streymur · Ferencváros · FH · Flamurtari Vlorë · Floriana · Gagra · Glentoran · Honka · Irtysh Pavlodar · Iskra-Stal · Juvenes/Dogana · Kecskemét · Khazar Lankaran · KuPS · Levadia Tallinn · Llanelli · Metalurg Skopje · Metalurgs Liepajas · Mika · Minsk · Örebro · Rad · Rudar Pljevlja · Shakhter Karagandy · Shakhtsyor Salihorsk · Sheriff Tiraspol · Sūduva Marijampolė · Tauras Tauragė · The New Saints · Tirana · TPS · Tromsø · Sant Julià · Vojvodina · Žilina
Eliminated in the first qualifying round AZAL · Banants · Banga Gargždai · Birkirkara · Buducnost Podgorica · Cliftonville · Daugava Daugavpils · Fola Esch · ÍBV · ÍF Fuglafjørður · Jagiellonia Białystok · Käerjéng 97 · Koper · Lusitanos · Milsami Orhei · Narva Trans · Neath · Nõmme Kalju · NSÍ Runavík · Renova · Široki Brijeg · Tre Penne · UE Santa Coloma · Ulisses · Zeta

Round and draw dates ·

Qualifying phase and play-off round · Group stage · Knockout stage · Final
Israeli Premier League
Clubs
Stadiums
Former clubs
Competition
Seasons

Categories:

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Mon Feb 13 03:07:29 2012.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.