FOOTBALL IN ISRAEL


Israel Football Association

Football () is the unofficial national sport of Israel. Football as an organised sport first developed in England who controlled Israel during the days of the British Mandate.

Contents
The Israel Football Association
League system
Structure
Cups
State Cup
Toto Cup
Qualification for European competitions
The Israel national team
Women's football
History
British Mandate
After Israeli independence
Stadiums of Israeli football
Seasons in Israeli football
External links

The Israel Football Association


The Israel Football Association (The IFA) is the governing body of football in the State of Israel. All of Israel's professional football clubs must be members, and hundreds of semi-professional and amateur clubs also belong.

League system


Main articles: Israeli football league system

The Israeli football league system has six levels and 16 different divisions, all run by the Israel Football Association (IFA). Promotion and relegation operates between each level, theoretically allowing clubs to progress from bottom to top within six seasons.
Structure

The structure of the Israeli league system is thus:

Ligat Ha'Al: the top division operates at the national level and has 12 member clubs

Liga Leumit: the second division operates at the national level and has, 12 member clubs

Liga Artzit: the third division operates at the national level and has 12 member clubs

Liga Alef: the fourth division is split into two regional leagues (north and south) and has 28 member clubs (14 in each division)

Liga Bet: the fifth division is split into four regional leagues (two in the north, two in the south) and has 64 member clubs (16 in each division)

Liga Gimel: the sixth division is split into seven regional leagues (four in the north, three in the south) and has 91 member clubs (12-15 in each division)

Cups


In Israel, there are two major cup competitions, the State Cup and the Toto Cup
State Cup

The State Cup () is the Israeli equivalent of the English FA Cup, and is open to all Israeli clubs, with clubs at the higher levels entering in the later rounds. It is a straightforward knock-out cup. The final is played at the National Stadium and the winner qualifies for the UEFA Cup.
Toto Cup

The Toto Cup () is the Israeli equivalent of a League Cup, the main difference being that there is a separate cup for each of the three national divisions. The cup is played first in a group stage, with the highest placed teams qualifying for the knock-out stages. Like the State Cup, the final is played at the National Stadium, though the winner does not qualify for the UEFA Cup.

Qualification for European competitions


Clubs who do well in either the Liga Al or State Cup qualify to compete in various UEFA-organised Europe-wide competitions in the following season (as well as continuing to play in domestic competitions). The number of Israeli clubs playing in Europe in any one season can range from four to six, depending on the qualification scenarios. Currently, Israel is awarded the following places in European competitions:
CompetitionWho QualifiesNotes
UEFA Champions LeagueClub finishing 1st in Ligat ha'Al
UEFA CupClubs finishing 2nd or 3rd or 4th in Ligat ha'AlIf the third-placed club has already qualified for Europe through the State Cup, then the next-highest Ligat ha'Al finishers get this place
State Cup winners
Any Israeli club that wins the UEFA Cup and has not already qualified for the Champions League or UEFA CupBy the UEFA Cup regulations (Regulation 1.07), this club's entry into the UEFA Cup will not be at the expense of any other entries to which its national federation is entitled
UEFA Intertoto CupClub finishing highest in the Liga Al to have entered and not qualified for any other European competition

In addition, once in a European competition, it becomes possible to qualify for others:

★ All the winners of the Champions League Third Qualifying Round go forward to the Champions League

★ All the losers of the Champions League Third Qualifying Round go forward to the UEFA Cup

★ All the winners of the UEFA Cup Second Qualifying Round go forward to the UEFA Cup

★ All the winners in the Intertoto Cup Final Round go forward to the UEFA Cup Second Qualifying Round

★ Any clubs playing in the Champions League that finish third in the group stage go into the UEFA Cup Third Round

The Israel national team


Main articles: Israel national football team

Israel at the 1970 World Cup

The Israel national football team played their very first international football match in Cairo, against Egypt in 1934 as Palestine/Eretz Yisrael. Their greatest triumph to date was qualifying for the World Cup in 1970.

Women's football


:''Main article: Women's football in Israel''

History


British Mandate

During the British Mandate of Palestine, organized football consisted of British and Jewish clubs. As early as 1906, Maccabi Tel Aviv was formed as a social group. On April 24, 1924 history was made when Hapoel Haifa was formed. Shortly after formation they joined the World Maccabi Organization. The first membership cards read, "Club Hapoel Sport, Cultural Organization Haifa" (A member of the World Maccabi Organization). Later during a meeting of Hapoel laborers in Afula, it was decided to break off from the World Maccabi Organization and create the Hapoel (Labor) Organization.
In February 1928, the first ever derby took place in the British Mandate between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Allenby Tel Aviv. Maccabi won 3-0 and was the start to the oldest rivalry that takes place today, in modern day Israel.
When a cup competition was formed, British teams dominated until May 26, 1928 when two Jewish clubs made it to the final in Jerusalem. Hapoel Alenby Tel Aviv beat Maccabi HaShmonai Jerusalem by a score of 2-0, but the cup was shared since Maccabi alleged to British officials that Hapoel had fielded an ineligible player.
Nine teams started the first league in 1932. The first winner of the league were the British Police who, under the guidance of Police Chief Speiser, were the best organized club in the country. Later he would serve as the first chairman of the football association.
During the mandate period, the international team competed under the title of Palestine, despite operating as a virtually all-Jewish organisation. The first international match was a qualifying match for the 1934 World Cup qualifier between Palestine and Egypt in Cairo, which resulted in a 7-1 defeat. The second leg, played in Tel Aviv, resulted in a 4-1 defeat and an 11-2 aggregate loss. Earlier, in 1931 a mixed team of Palestinian Jews and British played an international.
One of the first big tours of the international team was to Australia on the eve of World War II. The team was composed of players from both Hapoel and Maccabi organizations. Three players eventually ended up staying in Australia, two of those (Avraham Beit Halevi, and Menahem Marimovich) died while serving in the Australian army in attacks against the Japanese.
After Israeli independence


Just four months after Israel gained independence, the Israel national football team traveled to New York City to play their American counterparts in a friendly at the Polo Grounds. Over 40,000 spectators (mostly American Jews), witnessed the newly formed Israeli side lose to the Americans 3-1. Shmuel Ben Dror went down in history as the first goal scorer in the history of the Israel national football team.

Stadiums of Israeli football


Seasons in Israeli football


The following articles detail the major results and events in each season since 1934-35, when the first organised competition, the State Cup, was created. Seasons in ''italics'' are wartime seasons, when official national competition was suspended, although regional football continued.
'2000s:' 2000-012001-022002-032003-042004-052005-062006-072007-08

External links


;Official

The Israeli Football Association
;Unofficial

One.co.il - Israeli Sport Portal

Sport5 - Israeli Sports Television Channel

Israeli Football Live Online

BigSoccer.com's Israel Football Forum

Techelet Lavan - Israeli football website

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