Category: News
A numbers game: 171 league matches against Haifa
The league encounter which was played more than any league match
Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa met each other in the league 171 times as this is the league fixture which was played more than any other match.
Maccabi won 71 matches, Haifa won 49 while 51 matches ended in a draw with a total goal tally of 250-213 in Maccabi’s favor.
For the first time in history, Maccabi face Haifa on MD6 and the only day of the season this fixture wasn’t played.
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Maccabi’s record at Sammy Ofer
Since Maccabi Haifa moved from Kiryat Eliezer to Sammy Ofer Maccabi were the visiting team on 15 league encounters. Maccabi won 8 matches drawn 6 and lost just once – with a 66.7% success rate.
Overall, Maccabi played a total of 29 league matches at Sammy Ofer: Maccabi Haifa (15), Hapoel Haifa (10), Beitar Jerusalem (3) and Maccabi Netanya (1) of which 15 were won, 11 drawn and 3 lost with a 64.4% success rate.
This is the highest success rate amongst the 20 teams that featured in the league at that stadium. Maccabi Haifa are second with a 60.7% success rate in league matches.
Sheran Yeini holds the record of 41 appearances against Maccabi Haifa – the highest of any Maccabi player against a specific opponent.
Shiye Glazer is Maccabi’s leading goal scorer against Haifa with 22 goals with Eran Zahavi second with 10 goals.

Ivic’s record against Bachar
Vladimir Ivic’s record against Maccabi Haifa currently stands on 7 victories and a draw with a goal difference of 15-5 (92% success rate).
This is the best record amongst the 24 coaches in Maccabi’s history – of those who played more than twice against Haifa.
Barak Bachar faced Maccabi as a coach on 35 matches and has a record of 9 victories, 12 draws and 14 defeats.
Both teams arrived at this encounter from the two top spots. Maccabi and Haifa are the only two sides to have won 4 of 5 matches since the start of the season. Maccabi has a goal record of 18-1 and is the team which scored more than any other side in the league and conceded the least.
Maccabi also lead the charts with 93 shots on goal this season 40 of which on target. Haifa are narrowly behind with 81 shots on goal 37 of which on target.

Time travel: The dramatic 3-2 victory at Kiryat Eliezer
From the camera’s lens: Yonatan Cohen’s first training session
A day after signing a three-year-deal at the club, Yonatan Cohen returned this evening to the training complex at Kiryat Shalom. Cohen, who was reunited with his teammates held his first training session for what is his second tenure at the club.
Cohen joined the rest of the Maccabi squad which in their preparations for Saturday’s top of the table league clash away to Haifa who are one point adrift in the league standings.
Yeini: “We will battle hard on the pitch”
The 35-year-old Maccabi skipper whose side has a one-point advantage in the league table, insisted that Haifa’s defeat to Hapoel Jerusalem in before the international break will have no significance. “The fact Haifa lost to Hapoel Jerusalem in the previous round will not have no effect on us nor will it effect them. We always focus on the match ahead of us and I believe they will come prepared as well. This season we are a different team, a lot more organized, have a clear game plan and know exactly what we want to do”.
On the rivalry between the two clubs and the growing tension between the two sets of fans, Yeini said: “At the end of the day, football is entertainment. I am fully aware of the rivalry between the two clubs and sets of fans as each side wishes to prove who is the biggest club in the land. It is a very important match and we will battle hard on the pitch, and even though I appreciate the banter between the fans it should still remain in good taste. I am sure this match will prove to be yet another spectacle”.
Watch Ivic prepares for the match against Maccabi Haifa
Yonatan Cohen joins Maccabi on a 3-year-deal
Maccabi Tel Aviv and Pisa SC reached an agreement for the transfer of Yonatan Cohen who successfully completed his medical at Shamir medical center before signing three year deal with an option to extend.
Barak Itzhaki, Head of Maccabi’s Football Department, told the club’s official website: “Yonatan’s talent and ability are known to us all as we have no doubt he will strengthen us in a position we sought to strengthen. We are certain that Yonatan’s integration at a club he grew up at will be swift and smooth and we wish him good luck!”.
Yonatan Cohen who will return to wear the Yellow and Blue jersey with the number 24 said after signing his contract: “There is no one happier than me to return home. I can’t wait to meet all the Yellow fans and make them happy at Bloomfield stadium”.
Cohen, a product of Maccabi’s Youth Academy, scored a total of 41 goals in 111 appearances in all competitions, won a total of 7 trophies at Maccabi: 2 League Championships (18/19, 19/20), 1 State Cup (20/21), 2 Toto Cups (19/20, 20/21) and 2 Super Cups (19/20, 20/21). In European competitions Cohen scored 4 goals for Maccabi in 17 appearances and qualified with the team to the EUROPA League round of 32 in the 20/21 season.
In the summer of 2021 Cohen joined Pisa SC where he scored 4 goals in 27 appearances in all competitions playing for the Italian second division outfit.
Watch: The HISENSE sponsored goals of the month
Watch Eran Zahavi in a special interview for Rosh Hashana
So how does it feel to finally celebrate a holiday in Israel?
“To be honest – strange. I haven’t had a holiday in Israel for many years I think. Even when we had the chance to, when I was here, then I was always out somewhere with the national team or something like that – so I believe it should be fun”.
“The end of PSV Eindhoven’s match against Maccabi was amazing, emotional…I can tell you that the players and the coaching staff at PSV were shocked. They knew me at PSV but never knew the level of support I receive here in Israel and especially at Maccabi Tel Aviv. All of a sudden they saw all this love I receive before and during the match which is something not every player gets shall we say. This also played a part in my ultimate decision to return.
This is not the point: I said at the time that there was some sort of agreement, there were talks in January and we had very positive talks. Both sides understood that it could happen. The significant decision was where would I like to end my playing career? How would I like to end my playing career? And what picture do you visualise in your head? This is also some sort of a choice…”Like where would you like to die?”. In the end I will tell you: “Tomorrow you are set to die, where would you like to die?”…You would like to die where the closest people to you are and those who love you most. This is in some ways a metaphor I see in my head. Because at the end of the day this is football. The most significant part of my life at the moment, or at least in the past 35 years. So you need to make a choice and this is how I took the decision”.
The first time he met his new teammates at Meirlo: “The meeting with the rest of the team and players in Mierlo: Listen, it was strange. You have this feeling of a déjà vu but things are not the same. You are not at the same place, or the same status, you are not the same player and not the same age.
Suddenly I am the oldest player in the squad besides Sheran Yeini. You need to make a connection with the new players, you need to rebuild your status, even when you are coming from a some sort of a high status. You still need to prove what you are worth on the pitch, but at the same time do that off the pitch as well. It is not simple”.
On the dressing room he discovered on his return: “To be honest, I told them during the training camp that I feel as if the dressing room is a bit held back. I don’t know whether this is because the return of Vladimir Ivic as I heard that during his first two-year-tenure he was really tough and people were scared to breath. So his presence must have had its’ effect. But I remember a dressing room which was a bit more relaxed and how should I call it… a bit more vibrant, and how shall I call it ‘messier’. And suddenly you realise, there are very good lads and can feel their fear. I told them: “Lads, one has to relax as we are not at war in any way”.
On Ivic and the tribute he received after the first game: “It was a very nice compliment. To be perfectly honest it even took me by surprise. We did have a chat before I signed as it was important for me to hear how sees things and whether he knows me and what he had heard about me. At the end of the day I don’t want to define myself as some sort of a star because I can’t stand this definition as my behaviour is the exact opposite of a star. It was important for me to know that he knows that. And whether he understands that, or to know that he is not afraid to deal with a player who is a bit stronger from the ones he was used to see here at Maccabi Tel Aviv over the past couple of years he was here. Because there wasn’t such a dominant figure. There were dominant players but there wasn’t anyone who was really dominant and wanted to know whether it fits. As far as he is concerned, he told me: “Eran, I am not scared of any player, I am strong and to the contrary – I love players who work hard, run for the team and are not only thinking about themselves. He said he knew I was like that and said he believes we shouldn’t have a problem”. As far as I was concerned that was all I needed to here from a coach.
On his renewed debut for Maccabi: “I was stressed before the game and I was stressed after the match against Aris Thessaloniki. I was still not fully fit and still don’t trust myself a 100% as I know I haven’t reached the level of fitness I should be to play European football at this stage. The agreement was that I will play around 15 minutes maximum. I don’t know if you remember the game, but after around quarter of an hour I was already huffing and puffing, because to be honest it was extremely hot and I wasn’t on the pitch for a long time.
On the goal he scored: “It was an explosion of emotions because everyone waited for that which is something I have a difficulty explaining. It was an amazing feeling. Everyone waited for that moment and I made people happy which gave me a feeling of relief.
At the club, I think that I have slightly different targets than scoring goals and breaking this record or the other. Because in the end I think I must represent something different and bring something else to the team. Obviously I will be happy to do so and did that on many occasions in the past, but there are other good players here who can score goals and know how to take responsibility. This club managed for six years without me and won 2 league titles in the process. I can add a lot, but I am not the only player on the pitch. In some ways it hurts my character and I wouldn’t like to damage my killer instinct so I will keep my killer instinct and try score as many goals as I possibly can. If one could add another player then I will try do that because if I scored a goal or two and see a player in a better position I will try let him score and get him involved in the action as well”.
On the Maccabi he found in comparison to the Maccabi he found: “Look, there are things that changed at Maccabi Tel Aviv since I left, but I think there are other things which remained the same. You know, today I am here, 10 years ago it was Avi Nimni and before that there was someone else. Coaches come and go and somewhere you believe that Maccabi Tel Aviv is something beyond that.
The thing we missed most was the family and friends you could meet whenever you wanted. During the holidays when everyone are together and there is a feeling of a holiday – nothing can match that. We had very good friends abroad and we met loads of good people, but it is not the family you grew up around, it is not your roots you remember or even the same smell of the holidays. Things you remember from your childhood and things that bring back the memories – nostalgic stuff. But let us see how it all pans out as I hope we will enjoy ourselves”.
Mitch Goldhar’s greetings for the New Year
Dear Maccabi fans,
Over the next few days, we will celebrate the start of the Jewish New Year. A period of new beginnings, new challenges, and aspirations for a better future.
These days, where we all celebrate together with our families, you dear fans, prove game by game and season after season how strong, powerful, and united the Maccabi family really is. 
We all have ambitions and expectations to meet all the goals and challenges we face both on and off the pitch – and just like every year, we will do our best to match them.
I would like to use this opportunity On this occasion, to wish all the citizens of Israel, and the Maccabi fans in particular – a Happy, healthy, and successful New Year!
Shana Tova!
Mitch Goldhar






