Bnei Sakhnin F.C.
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Full name | Ihoud Bnei Sakhnin F.C. | ||
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Founded | 1991 | ||
Ground | Doha Stadium, Sakhnin | ||
Capacity | 8,500 | ||
Chairman | Muhamed Abu Younis | ||
Manager | Slobodan Drapić | ||
League | Israeli Premier League | ||
2022–23 | Israeli Premier League, 9th of 14 | ||
Website | Club website | ||
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Bnei Sakhnin F.C. (
History
Early years
Bnei Sakhnin was formed in 1991 by a merger of Maccabi Sakhnin and Hapoel Sakhnin. They were promoted to Liga Artzit (then the second tier) in 1997. In 1998–99 they finished in the relegation zone, but were reprieved when Maccabi Jaffa, who had finished bottom of the top division, were relegated three leagues due to financial problems.
In
Prior to their first season in the top division, Sakhnin were favourites to be relegated, and it was thought that Nazareth had a better chance of survival. Questions remained as to whether the squad that gained promotion would be able to compete at the top level, along with the added pressures not to become the next
Later successes
The club signed former Maccabi Haifa striker Raffi Cohen and loaned another striker, Lior Asulin from Maccabi Herzliya. Sagi Strauss was brought in to mind the nets from Maccabi Petah Tikva. Despite the gloomy predictions, the club defied the odds, eventually finishing 10th, four points clear of relegation, whilst Nazareth finished bottom. However, the highlight of the season was the State Cup victory, also a first by an Israeli-Arab club.[1] In the final, Sakhnin beat surprise finalists, second division side Hapoel Haifa 4–1. The team gained a reputation for being a tough, combative outfit, similar in style to the Crazy Gang period at English club Wimbledon. Captain and club stalwart Abbas Suan (he had been at the club since its formation, having been part of the Hapoel Sakhnin team since 1994) won particular acclaim, gaining a call-up to the Israel squad, and winning his first cap in February 2004.
The cup win meant that the club became the first
During the
During their spell in the top flight, several Sakhnin games were plagued by hooliganism. Palestinians were viewed as inferior during the time, and faced hardships both inside and outside of the soccer stadium. At the annual Land Day ceremony in Sakhnin in the year of 2000, a large crowd of Palestinians were unexplainably tear gassed. Political power controlled not only the population, but the atmosphere at soccer games as well. Studies have shown that Arab males who attended soccer games were less likely to be proud of their Palestinian descent. In 2000, Sakhnin's first game was delayed for weeks, though when the game did come about, the visiting Jewish team received flowers. Though events (such as this) coated by such turmoil aggravated those who resided in Sakhnin, their people still attempted to use the soccer stadium as a outlet to ease the relations with those who brought political unrest and corruption. [2]
Despite chairman Ghnaim's stated mission to create a "cultural rainbow" from his football club, games against
Despite a large cash injection made by Israeli businessman Arcadi Gaydamak ($400,000) in the hope of promoting peace and harmony among the citizens of Israel,[4] and a return to their rebuilt home stadium (largely financed by the Emir of Qatar, hence the renaming to Doha Stadium), Sakhnin were relegated at the end of 2005–06 season, finishing nine points from safety.
However, with one of the largest budgets in the division (around five and a half million
In the 2018–19 season the club ended dead last. After repromotion one year later the club's 2020–21 season started off painfully, with the first match ending in a 3–0 home loss to Bnei Yehuda. The next week, some of the team's players and management team had to quarantine as a result of COVID-19 pandemic precautions, and they played their away match against Maccabi Netanya with several absent players and no coach. After suffering a 7–0 loss, the greatest defeat in the club's history, the Sakhnin chairman left the administrative division of Ligat Ha'al. Despite a horrible start with just one point after the first six matches and closing the season with four more losses the club could avoid relegation by being one point better than Bnei Yehuda.
In popular culture
The rise of the Bnei Sakhnin F.C. was the subject of a popular documentary film by noted Israeli director Ram Loevy.[1]
The team is also the subject of the critically acclaimed 2010 documentary film "After The Cup: Sons of Sakhnin United", which follows the team after they win the Israel State Cup directed by American Christopher Browne.
Sponsorship
During the 2005–06 season, the club signed a shirt sponsorship deal with Israeli mobile phone company Cellcom. Talks are currently ensuing over continuing the deal even though the chief executive of Cellcom's Arab sector affairs, Suliman Diab, has left his non-executive post with Bnei Sakhnin to join Liga Artzit (third tier) side Bnei Tamra.
The club's budget was bolstered on 15 June 2006 when Gaydamak announced that he would donate two million shekels to the club in hope that they will make a return to Israel's top league.
Support
The majority of fans of Bnei Sakhnin are
Big matches (especially those against rival club Beitar Jerusalem) can attract large crowds but toward the end of the 2005–06 season when the club was set to be relegated, the attendance at matches declined dramatically. The highest attendance ever to be in a match of Sakhnin was at the 2004 Israel State Cup Final when Ramat Gan Stadium was filled with Arab supporters from Galilee to the far Negev which all of them came to support the club.
Players
Current squad
- As of 1 March 2024[6]
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Foreigners (2023-24)
Only up to six non-Israeli nationals can be in an Israeli club squad. Those with Jewish ancestry, married to an Israeli, or have played in Israel for an extended period of time (e.g. Gustavo Boccoli), can claim a passport or permanent residency which would allow them to play with Israeli status.
Coaching staff
Position | Name |
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Manager | Slobodan Drapić |
Assistant Manager | Salah Hasarma |
Managers
- Azmi Nassar (1999–00)
- Momi Zafran (2002–2005)
- Eyal Lahman (2003–2005)
- Momi Zafran (2005)
- Michael Kadosh (2005–2006)
- Elisha Levy (1 July 2006 – 30 June 2008)
- Freddy David (1 July 2008 – 2008)
- Eyal Lahman (2008–09)
- Eran Kulik (2009 – 19 Oct 2009)
- Marco Balbul (21 Oct 2009 – 30 June 2010)
- Yuval Naim (1 July 2010 – 11 Aug 2010)
- Haim Levy (2010)
- Slobodan Drapić (2010–11)
- Shlomi Dora (4 April 2011 – 10 March 2013)
- Marco Balbul (11 March 2013 – 19 June 2014)
- Guy Levy (19 June 2014)
- Eli Cohen (born 1961)(2014–2015)
- Yossi Abuksis(2015–2017)
- Jairo Swirsky (2017)
- Aiman Khalaila (caretaker) (2017)
- Felix Naim (2017)
- Tal Banin (2018)
- Benny Ben Zaken (2018)
- Amir Turgeman (2018–2019)
- Giorgi Daraselia (2019)
- Eldad Shavit (2019)
- Nissan Yehezkel (2019)
- Nisso Avitan (2020)
- Sharon Mimer (2020–2021)
- Haim Silvas (2021–2022)
- Kobi Refua (2022–2023)
- Slobodan Drapić (2023–present)
Titles
- State Cup
- Winners (1): 2003–04
- Toto Cup
- Runners-up (1): 2020–21
Records
- Most League Goals: 31 Ahmed Kasoum,(2003–2006; 2009–2014)
- Most League Goals in a Season (individual): 16 Oren Muharer, Liga Leumit, 2000–01
- Most Goals scored in a match: 3 Samir Zampir v Beitar Jerusalem, 1 May 2016
- Most League Goals in a Season (team): 60 2011/12
References
- ^ S2CID 144599488.
- ^ Sorek, Tamir. The Palestinian Flag Is Back: Arab Soccer in a Jewish State Revisited. Berghahn Books, 2019, p. 87. https://www.jstor.org/stable/48563854
- ^ Spurs Legend On Life At Racist Israeli Club Archived 18 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Sky News, 6 October 2006
- ^ Soccer: In Israel and Italy, storied teams rise Archived 21 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine International Herald Tribune, 15 April 2007
- ^ Harush, Moshe (14 January 2011). "Gaza war sparks tensions for Israeli Arab soccer team – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 30 June 2011.
- ^ "Bnei Sakhnin (squad)". Israeli Premier League. 27 February 2018. Retrieved 15 May 2023.