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| Full name | Hapoel Ramat Gan Givatayim Football Club מועדון כדורגל הפועל רמת גן גבעתיים | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname(s) | Urduns | ||
| Founded | 1927 | ||
| Ground | Ramat Gan Stadium, Ramat Gan | ||
| Capacity | 13,370 (permitted seats) | ||
| Owner | Yehuda Doliner | ||
| Manager | Ori Guttman | ||
| League | Liga Leumit | ||
| 2022–23 | Liga Leumit, 9th of 16 | ||
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Hapoel Ramat Gan Givatayim F.C. (Hebrew: מועדון כדורגל הפועל רמת-גן גבעתיים, Moadon Kaduregel Hapoel Ramat Gan Givatayim) is an Israeli football club from Ramat Gan and Givatayim. They currently play in Liga Leumit, the second tier of Israeli football. Home matches are played at Ramat Gan Stadium, which has a capacity of 13,370. Their regular home strip is all-red.
History
The club was founded in 1927 during the Mandate era by Jewish settlers in Ramat Gan. After independence, the club were placed in the top division.
After a series of mid-table finishes, they were relegated to the second division in 1959–60 after finishing bottom. In 1962–63, the club were promoted back to the top division, and followed it up by becoming the first team to win the championship in their first season after promotion. The championship-winning match against Hapoel Petah Tikva was watched by the club's record crowd of 9,000. However, this success proved to be their zenith, as they were overtaken by city rivals Hakoah who were champions in the following season, and were relegated at the end of the 1968–69 season.
The early 1980s was a yo-yo era, as the club were promoted and immediately relegated twice in succession from 1979–80 to 1982–83. In 1988–89 they won promotion again, but were again immediately relegated, this being their last period of time in the top flight.
By the end of the 1990s, the club had sunk into Liga Artzit, the third division, though they did pick up some silverware by winning the Toto Cup for third division teams in 1999–2000. In the same season, they were promoted back to the second division.
In 2002–03, Hapoel Ramat Gan became the first team from outside the top division to win the State Cup, when they beat Hapoel Be'er Sheva 5–4 on penalties after a 1–1 draw. The win also meant the club qualified for the UEFA Cup.
Hapoel were drawn against Levski Sofia of Bulgaria in the first round. However, because of a UEFA ban on matches in Israel at the time (due to the security situation), the club had to play their home match in Dunajská Streda, Slovakia. The "home" match attracted a crowd of just 300, and Hapoel lost the tie 5–0 on aggregate (1–0, 4–0).
The following season, the costs of playing in Europe and the loss of many of the best players saw the club finish bottom of the table, resulting in relegation back to the third level. A 9-point deduction for financial issues at the start of the 2005–06 season resulted in another season of struggle, with the club finishing one place above relegation. The following season they won the league, and were promoted back to Liga Leumit.
In 2008–09, the club was promoted to the Israeli Premier League.
At the end of the regular games of 2009/2010 season the team was ranked in 11th place, but after turning half points system offset various management problems is down to 14th place, promising only the remaining league playoff game against Hapoel Kfar Saba 0–1 after it increased . Summer 2010 was characterized by economic uncertainty following professional financial obligations. On June 30, the owner Yaron Koris announced that the team will continue to play after the coverage obligations by its sponsors, and that he leaves the group after four years. Group management was transferred to the management group headed by Shahar Ben Ami gave Datner. In addition, Yuval Naim left after five years as coach and was replaced by Shlomi Dora. On 15 November 2010, Dora was sacked as due to teams league ranking in the last place in the Israeli Premier League for a long time. He was replaced by Zvika Zemach. and now managed by Freddy David, who led the team to win the Toto Cup Leumit trophy in 2011.
Hapoel Ramat Gan finished the regular 2010–11 season at the bottom of the Israeli Premier Division, with just eight points – seventeen points adrift of the penultimately placed Bnei Sakhnin. They had already been deducted four points due to double contracts with players and staff from the previous year. They then finished at the foot of the Bottom Play-Offs mini-table and so were relegated into the Liga Leumit along with Hapoel Ashkelon.
In 2012–13, they were relegated from the Premier League and yet still won their second State Cup as they defeated Hapoel Ironi Kiryat Shmona 4–2 on penalties after a 1–1 draw.
Current squad
- As of 11 December 2023
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European record
| Season | Competition | Round | Opponents | 1st Leg | 2nd Leg | Aggregate | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003–04 | UEFA Cup | First round |  Levski Sofia | 0–1 | 0–4 | 0–5 | 
| 2013–14 | UEFA Europa League | Third qualifying round |  Estoril | 0–0 | 0–1 | 0–1 | 
Honours
League
| Honour | No. | Years | 
|---|---|---|
| Championships | 1 | 1963–64 | 
| Second tier | 3 | 1962–63, 1988–89, 2011–12 | 
| Third tier | 3 | 1993–94, 1999–2000, 2006–07 | 
Cups
| Honour | No. | Years | 
|---|---|---|
| State Cup | 2 | 2002–03, 2012–13 | 
| Toto Cup (second division) | 1 | 2011–12 | 
| Toto Cup (third division) | 3 | 1999–2000, 2005–06, 2006–07 | 
Records
- Attendance: 9,000 vs Hapoel Petah Tikva (28 March 1964)
- Win: 10–0 vs Beitar Netanya (18 May 1940)
- Goalscorer: Reuven Cohen, 85 goals (1955–68)
Managers
 Moshe Poliakov (1935) Moshe Poliakov (1935)
 Haim Reich (1939) Haim Reich (1939)
 Isidor Singer (1939–45) Isidor Singer (1939–45)
 Haim Reich (1946) Haim Reich (1946)
  Shlomo Poliakov (1947–50) Shlomo Poliakov (1947–50)
 Emmanuel Galili (1951) Emmanuel Galili (1951)
 Zvi Erlich (1951–53) Zvi Erlich (1951–53)
 Emmanuel Galili (1953) Emmanuel Galili (1953)
  Jack Schtakovnik (1953–54) Jack Schtakovnik (1953–54)
 Emmanuel Galili (1954–55) Emmanuel Galili (1954–55)
 Monia Goshen (1955) Monia Goshen (1955)
 Haim Reich (1955–56) Haim Reich (1955–56)
 Moshe Varon (1956–59) Moshe Varon (1956–59)
 Herzl Fritzner (1959–61) Herzl Fritzner (1959–61)
 Moshe Varon (1961–62) Moshe Varon (1961–62)
 David Schweitzer (1962–65) David Schweitzer (1962–65)
 Moshe Litvak (1965–66) Moshe Litvak (1965–66)
 David Schweitzer (1966–68) David Schweitzer (1966–68)
 Yechiel Mor (1968–69) Yechiel Mor (1968–69)
 Reuven Cohen (1969–70) Reuven Cohen (1969–70)
 Avraham Bendori (1970–71) Avraham Bendori (1970–71)
 David Farkash (1971–72) David Farkash (1971–72)
 Amnon Raz (1972–73) Amnon Raz (1972–73)
 Nissim Bachar (1973–75) Nissim Bachar (1973–75)
 Benny Conforti (1975) Benny Conforti (1975)
 Uri Weinberg (1975–76) Uri Weinberg (1975–76)
 Shimon Ben Yehonatan (1976–77) Shimon Ben Yehonatan (1976–77)
 Hanoch Mordechovich (1977–78) Hanoch Mordechovich (1977–78)
 Shmuel Baruch (1978–79) Shmuel Baruch (1978–79)
 Leon Konstantinovski (1979–81) Leon Konstantinovski (1979–81)
 Eliezer Spiegel (1981–82) Eliezer Spiegel (1981–82)
 Shimon Ben Yehonatan (1982–83) Shimon Ben Yehonatan (1982–83)
 Nissim Bachar (1983–84) Nissim Bachar (1983–84)
 Itzhak Vissoker (1984–85) Itzhak Vissoker (1984–85)
 Amir Kopler (1985–86) Amir Kopler (1985–86)
 Shimon Ben Yehonatan (1986) Shimon Ben Yehonatan (1986)
 Ronny Levy (1986) Ronny Levy (1986)
 Michael Kadosh (1986–87) Michael Kadosh (1986–87)
 Moshe Meiri (1987–88) Moshe Meiri (1987–88)
 Leon Konstantinovski (1988–89) Leon Konstantinovski (1988–89)
 Dror Kashtan (1989–90) Dror Kashtan (1989–90)
 David Schweitzer (1990–91) David Schweitzer (1990–91)
 Moshe Meiri (1991–92) Moshe Meiri (1991–92)
 Dror Bar Nur (1992–93) Dror Bar Nur (1992–93)
 Aharon Kapitolnik (1993) Aharon Kapitolnik (1993)
 Avi Buchsenbaum (1993–95) Avi Buchsenbaum (1993–95)
 Reuven Cohen (1995–96) Reuven Cohen (1995–96)
 Asher Messing (1996–97) Asher Messing (1996–97)
 David Karako (1997–98) David Karako (1997–98)
 Janos Pas and Janos Pas and Ilan Harpaz (1998) Ilan Harpaz (1998)
 Eli Cohen (1998–2001) Eli Cohen (1998–2001)
 Motti Ivanir (2001–02) Motti Ivanir (2001–02)
 Eli Cohen (2002–04) Eli Cohen (2002–04)
 Yaron Hochenboim (2004) Yaron Hochenboim (2004)
 Itzik Baruch (2004) Itzik Baruch (2004)
 Itzik Ovadia (2004–05) Itzik Ovadia (2004–05)
 Rafi Buskila (2005) Rafi Buskila (2005)
 Nissim Cohen (2005) Nissim Cohen (2005)
 Yuval Naim (2005–10) Yuval Naim (2005–10)
 Shlomi Dora (2010) Shlomi Dora (2010)
 Tzvika Tzemah (2010–11) Tzvika Tzemah (2010–11)
 Itzik Baruch (2011) Itzik Baruch (2011)
 Yaron Hochenboim (2011) Yaron Hochenboim (2011)
 Freddy David (2011–12) Freddy David (2011–12)
 Eli Cohen (2012–13) Eli Cohen (2012–13)
 Arik Gilrovich (2013) Arik Gilrovich (2013)
 Guy Levy (2013–14) Guy Levy (2013–14)
 Tamir Ben Ami (2014) Tamir Ben Ami (2014)
 Dani Golan (2014–16) Dani Golan (2014–16)
  Patricio Sayegh (2016) Patricio Sayegh (2016)
 Lior Zada (2016–17) Lior Zada (2016–17)
 Arik Benado (2017) Arik Benado (2017)
 Itzik Baruch (2017-2018) Itzik Baruch (2017-2018)
 Dani Golan (2018) Dani Golan (2018)
 Nir Berkovic (2018–2019) Nir Berkovic (2018–2019)
Source:[1]
References
- ↑ List of All Managers HaMakhtesh (in Hebrew)
External links
- Official Site
- Fansite Archived 2012-09-06 at the Wayback Machine











