Israeli football clubs in international competitions

Israeli football clubs have competed in international football tournaments since 1967, when Hapoel Tel Aviv played in the inaugural Asian Champion Club Tournament. Israeli clubs Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv competed in all four editions of the Asian Champion Club Tournament before it was discontinued after 1971. The Israel Football Association was excluded from AFC competitions, and Israeli clubs were not invited to take part in the competition when it was renewed as the Asian Club Championship, which is now the AFC Champions League.

Between 1976 and 1994, Israeli clubs took part in the Intertoto Cup, the only international club competition available, as the IFA wasn't affiliated to any confederation.

Israel was admitted to UEFA in 1991 and Israeli clubs participated European football tournaments since 1992, when Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva played in the Champions League and the Cup Winners' Cup (respectively). Since 1992, Israeli clubs took part in the UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup, UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, UEFA Europa League and UEFA Intertoto Cup.

Full Asian record

Season Club Round Date Opponent Score Venue
1967 Hapoel Tel Aviv F 19 December 1967 Selangor FA 2–1 Bangkok, Thailand
1969 Maccabi Tel Aviv GS 15 January 1969 Toyo Kogyo 3–2 Bangkok, Thailand
19 January 1969 Kowloon Motor Bus 5–0
22 January 1969 Perak FA 1–1
26 January 1969 Persepolis 0–0
SF 28 January 1969 Mysore State 6–1
F 30 January 1969 Yangzee FC 1–0
1970 Hapoel Tel Aviv GS 2 April 1970 Royal Thai Police FC 5–0 Amjadieh Stadium, Tehran, Iran
4 April 1970 West Bengal 3–1
6 April 1970 PSMS Medan 3–1
SF 8 April 1970 Homenetmen w/o
F 10 April 1970 Taj Tehran 1–2 (a.e.t.)
1971 Maccabi Tel Aviv PR 22 March 1971 Perak FA 1–0 National Stadium, Bangkok, Thailand
GS 25 March 1971 Al-Shorta w/o
27 March 1971 FC Punjab Police 4–1
29 March 1971 Bangkok Bank FC 4–1
SF 31 March 1971 ROK Army 2–0
F 2 April 1971 Al-Shorta w/o

Performance table

Club APP. P W D L GF GA
Hapoel Tel Aviv25401145
Maccabi Tel Aviv210820276
Total41512214111

Intertoto Cup (1976–1994)

Israeli teams first appeared in the Intertoto Cup in 1976, with Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem, champions and runners-up in the previous season, debuting. In 1979, due to the cost of travelling to Europe, only one team, Maccabi Netanya was entered into the competition,[1][2][3] and between 1980 and 1992 the two Israeli entrants played in one group to reduce travelling expenses.[4] In 1993 and 1994, as the format of the competition was changed to allow participating teams to play only two away matches, Israeli teams were allocated to two different groups.

Season Club Group Rank Opponents W D L GF GA
1976 Beitar Jerusalem 1 3rd Young Boys, Malmö FF, Admira Vienna 2221213
Hapoel Be'er Sheva 2 3rd Hertha Berlin, Standard Liège, Køge 132813
1977 Maccabi Jaffa 1 4th Halmstad, Vojvodina, Amsterdam 213915
Maccabi Tel Aviv 2 4th Duisburg, Standard Liège, Twente 1141015
1978 Maccabi Tel Aviv 5 3rd Malmö FF, FC Zürich, Admira Vienna 2041010
Maccabi Netanya 8 1st Sloboda Tuzla, Elfsborg, Lillestrøm 330168
1979 Maccabi Netanya 1 3rd Werder Bremen, Standard Liège, Rapid Vienna 123810
1980 Maccabi Netanya 3 1st KB, Royal Antwerp 321116
Maccabi Tel Aviv 4th 114814
1981 Maccabi Netanya 1 3rd Wiener SK, R.F.C. de Liège 222118
Hapoel Tel Aviv 4th 024616
1982 Hapoel Tel Aviv 5 2nd Admira Vienna, Norrköping 4021210
Hapoel Kfar Saba 4th 114818
1983 Maccabi Netanya 4 1st AGF, FC Lucerne 5011710
Shimshon Tel Aviv 4th 114510
1984 Maccabi Netanya 8 1st Admira Vienna, FC Wettingen 4111313
Beitar Jerusalem 4th 015614
1985 Maccabi Haifa 8 1st Arminia Bielefeld, Sturm Graz 4111312
Beitar Jerusalem 4th 114512
1986 Maccabi Haifa 8 2nd Lyngby, Grazer AK 222710
Hapoel Tel Aviv 3rd 123912
1987 Beitar Jerusalem 8 3rd Brøndby, VfL Bochum 213311
Bnei Yehuda 4th 015416
1988 Beitar Jerusalem 7 3rd Ikast FS, Sturm Graz 123816
Shimshon Tel Aviv 4th 024316
1989 Hapoel Petah Tikva 8 3rd Sparta Prague, Wisła Kraków 213911
Beitar Jerusalem 4th 114713
1990 Maccabi Haifa 3 2nd Lech Poznań, BFC Siófok 321145
Bnei Yehuda 4th 015518
1991 Maccabi Haifa 10 3rd Örebro, Saarbrücken 204617
Hapoel Petah Tikva 4th 015817
1992 Maccabi Petah Tikva 9 3rd Slavia Prague, Bayer Leverkusen 132711
Maccabi Netanya 4th 024413
1993 Maccabi Tel Aviv 5 5th Slavia Prague, Lokomotive Leipzieg, Aalborg, Häcken 01329
Beitar Jerusalem 8 5th Dynamo Dresden, FC Aarau, Wiener SK, Iraklis 1908 02236
1994 Maccabi Netanya 1 3rd Halmstad, Lokomotiv Sofia, Sparta Prague, Silkeborg 12155
Hapoel Be'er Sheva 2 2nd Young Boys, Electroputere Craiova, Karlsruhe, Häcken 21195

Performance table

Club APP. P W D L GF GA
Maccabi Netanya8461914138574
Beitar Jerusalem740710234485
Maccabi Haifa42411584044
Maccabi Tel Aviv42243153048
Hapoel Tel Aviv3185492738
Hapoel Be'er Sheva2103431718
Hapoel Petah Tikva2122281728
Shimshon Tel Aviv212138826
Bnei Yehuda2120210934
Maccabi Jaffa16213915
Hapoel Kfar Saba16114818
Maccabi Petah Tikva16132711
Total372145652106301439

Full European record

Israeli clubs have participated in UEFA tournaments since 1992–93. Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv (both twice) and Hapoel Tel Aviv had managed to qualify to the Champions League group stage. The same clubs, along with Maccabi Petah Tikva and Ironi Kiryat Shmona qualified to the UEFA Cup/Europa League group stage. The furthest any club reached in a European tournament was the quarter-finals, reached by Maccabi Haifa in 1998–99 and by Hapoel Tel Aviv in 2001–02.

Performance table

Club UEFA Champions League UEFA Europa League

(includes UEFA Cup)

UEFA Cup Winners' Cup UEFA Intertoto Cup Total
App.PWDLGFGAApp.PWDLGFGAApp.PWDLGFGAApp.PWDLGFGAApp.PWDLGFGA
Mac. Haifa[5] 838156177054 10481714176263 3189272922 383051324 20112442246167152
Hap. Tel Aviv[6] 2145362120 1492431732135101 0000000 14004110 17110482042157131
Mac. Tel Aviv[7] 840129193956 11572512209478 1421164 0000000 17101392240139138
Beitar Jerusalem[8] 5166372029 62688103743 0000000 282151220 12501612226992
Hap. Be'er Sheva[9] 1632187 410226822 14112315 1210124 72275102148
Bnei Yehuda[10] 0000000 52212282219 0000000 0000000 52212282219
Mac. Netanya[11] 0000000 410235716 0000000 1210133 5123361019
Ir. Kiryat Shmona[12] 1622296 4141581424 0000000 0000000 42037102330
Mac. Petah Tikva[13] 0000000 2114072121 0000000 2833299 4197393030
Hap. Haifa[14] 1402215 1420268 0000000 3102261420 41844102133
Hap. Petah Tikva[15] 0000000 1632153 1430162 26033114 4166551316
Bnei Sakhnin[16] 0000000 1420278 0000000 1420244 284041112
FC Ashdod[17] 0000000 1202033 0000000 1421173 26231106
Hap. Ramat Gan[18] 0000000 2401306 0000000 0000000 2401306
Hap. Rishon LeZion[19] 0000000 0000000 1210133 0000000 1210133

Update: 25 August 2016

Notes:

  • The total appearances column sum all club appearances by seasons and not by competitions (i.e. for a club which played in CL and EL in one season, only one appearance is calculated in the total column, while one appearance is calculated for each competition).
  • Maccabi Haifa had beaten FC Haka 4–0 in 2001–02, which was later awarded to HJK as a walkover win due to Maccabi Haifa fielding a suspended player.[20] The original score is included in the table.
  • Maccabi Tel Aviv had beaten PAOK 2–1 in 2004–05, which was later awarded to Maccabi Tel Aviv as a walkover win due to PAOK fielding a suspended player.[21] The original score is included in the table.
  • In 2013–14 UEFA Europa League Maccabi Tel Aviv were drawn to meet PAOK in the Play-off round. However, on 14 August 2013, Metalist Kharkiv were disqualified from the 2013–14 UEFA club competitions because of previous match-fixing. [22] UEFA decided to replace Metalist Kharkiv in the Champions League play-off round with PAOK, who were eliminated by Metalist Kharkiv in the third qualifying round. [23] Thus, Maccabi Tel Aviv, the opponent of PAOK in the Europa League play-off round, qualified directly for the Europa League group stage without playing any match in the play-off round. The two cancelled matches are not included in the table.

References

  1. A Financial Proposal for Entering Two Teams to the Intertoto Was Prepared in Maccabi Ma'ariv, 5 December 1978, Historical Jewish Press (in Hebrew)
  2. The Champions Netanya Will Represent Israel in the Intertoto Ma'ariv, 13 December 1978, Historical Jewish Press (in Hebrew)
  3. Almog: We Decided Upon One in the Intertoto Since We Will Not Be Able to Tolerate a 25 Million IL Deficit Davar, 13 December 1978, Historical Jewish Press (in Hebrew)
  4. The Condition to Entering 2 Teams to the Intertoto – In One Group Davar, 12 February 1980, Historical Jewish Press (in Hebrew)
  5. uefa.com. "Maccabi Haifa in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  6. uefa.com. "Hapoel Tel Aviv in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  7. uefa.com. "Maccabi Tel Aviv in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  8. uefa.com. "Beitar Jerusalem in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  9. uefa.com. "Hapoel Be'er Sheva in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  10. uefa.com. "Bnei Yehuda in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  11. uefa.com. "Maccabi Netanya in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  12. uefa.com. "Hapoel Kiryat Shmona in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  13. uefa.com. "Maccabi Petah Tikva in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  14. uefa.com. "Hapoel Haifa in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  15. uefa.com. "Hapoel Petah Tikva in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  16. uefa.com. "Bnei Sakhnin in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  17. uefa.com. "FC Ashdod in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  18. uefa.com. "Hapoel Ramat Gan in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  19. uefa.com. "Hapoel Rishon LeZion in UEFA competitions". Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  20. Maccabi Haifa Win Over Haka Reversed; No Liverpool Game Doron Bergerfreund, 3 August 2001, HaAretz
  21. PAOK punished with 3-0 loss UEFA, 13 August 2004
  22. "Metalist disqualified from UEFA competitions". UEFA.com. 14 August 2013.
  23. "PAOK to replace Metalist in play-offs". UEFA.com. 14 August 2013.
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