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Hapoel Jerusalem B.C.

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מועדון כדורסל הפועל ירושלים
Hapoel Bank Yahav Jerusalem
מועדון כדורסל הפועל ירושלים Hapoel Bank Yahav Jerusalem logo
LeaguesLigat HaAl
EuroCup
Founded1943
ArenaPais Arena Jerusalem
Capacity11,600
LocationJerusalem, Israel
Team colorsRed, Black, White
     
PresidentOri Allon
Head coachSimone Pianigiani
Team captainYotam Halperin
Championships1 Israeli Championship
1 EuroCup
4 Israeli State Cups
4 Israeli League Cups
Websitehapoel.co.il

Hapoel Jerusalem Basketball Club (Hebrew: הפועל ירושלים), for sponsorships reasons Hapoel Bank Yahav Jerusalem, is the premier professional basketball club of the City of Jerusalem and competes in the EuroCup, Israeli Premier League, and the Israeli State Cup. Hapoel has won several titles, including the ULEB Cup (now called EuroCup) in 2004, and the Israeli League championship in 2015. In 2013, a new ownership group headed by Ori Allon, took over, and the club has since seen a remarkable advancement and expansion. The team began playing in the Jerusalem Arena in 2014.

History

Hapoel Jerusalem Basketball Club was founded in 1935 and incorporated in 1943 in Jerusalem. It had its first appearance in the Premier League in 1955. Hapoel played in the first division most of the 1950s and 1960s, with notable players, such as David Kaminsky and Amir Berlinsky. The following two decades had ups and downs, as Hapoel toggled between the first and second divisions.

In 1986, led by coach Simi Riger the team advanced to the Premier League, after five consecutive years in the second division. Since then, Hapoel has remained in the Premier league and became an important factor in the Israeli Basketball.

In 1996 and 1997, Hapoel won the State Cup, defeating Maccabi Tel Aviv in the finals, at the Yad Eliyahu (Nokia) Arena. The team was led by Adi Gordon, widely considered the team's symbol and one of its best players.

In 2004, Hapoel Jerusalem won its first European title, the ULEB Cup, defeating Real Madrid in the final in Charleroi, Belgium.[1] Also in that year, the other major European basketball competition, the EuroLeague, was won by Maccabi Elektra Tel Aviv making Israel the leading basketball nation in Europe and the Middle East for 2004. In 2005, Israeli-Russian billionaire Arcadi Gaydamak purchased a large stake in the club. As a result, the team got stronger and signed four American players with an NBA record – Tamar Slay, Horace Jenkins, Roger Mason, and Mario Austin. The team also signed Israeli star Meir Tapiro.

In 2007, Hapoel won its third Israel State Cup, defeating Bnei HaSharon 103–85 at Nokia Arena. In early 2008 Hapoel came back from being 22 points down, in the 4th quarter to win its fourth State Cup, beating Maccabi Tel Aviv 93–89. In late 2008 Hapoel won its first Israeli Basketball League Cup, beating Ironi Nahariya 84–69.

In September 2009, oil tycoon Guma Aguiar joined Hapoel Jerusalem as the team's sponsor and helped clear the debts left by Mr. Gaydamak. This ensured Hapoel would be able to compete yet again at the highest levels. On October 8, 2009 Hapoel beat Maccabi Tel Aviv in the Winner Cup finals 86–80, winning the club's second cup in a row.

One year after the mysterious disappearance of Guma Aguiar, a new ownership group headed by entrepreneur Ori Allon took over, and Guy Harel succeeded Dani Klein as general manager.

On November 19, 2013, The New York Times reported that Tom Maayan, an Israeli player for the Seton Hall Pirates was forced to return to his homeland for army service, the Jerusalem basketball club picked him up, and he now combines his service with playing professional basketball.[2]

Amar'e Stoudemire

In April 2014, the New York Post and The Wall Street Journal reported that six-time NBA All-Star Amar'e Stoudemire might join Hapoel after his contract with the New York Knicks officially expired at the end of the 2014–15 NBA season.[3][4] However, Stoudemire signed with the Dallas Mavericks to finish out his original contract that had expired with the Knicks at that time, and then went to the Miami Heat after his deal with the Mavericks expired. Once he decided to retire from the NBA in July 2016, he signed with Hapoel Jerusalem on August 1, 2016.[5]

On June 20, 2014 the club signed coach Danny Franco who led Maccabi Haifa to the 2014 finals against current EuroLeague title-holder Maccabi Tel Aviv. That same day, the club also signed season MVP Donta Smith.[6]

On June 25, 2014, the Executive Board of Euroleague Commercial Assets unanimously agreed to hand Hapoel a wild-card to compete for a spot in the EuroLeague qualifications. The move came in light of Hapoel positioning herself as a promising club with a new ownership group with great stability and a brand new 11,600 seat arena to be ready for the 2014–15 season.[7]

On June 25, 2015, Hapoel won the Israeli Championship for the first time in their history, after defeating Hapoel Eilat in the Final.

Team management

Ownership

  • 10% – The Amuta.
  • 90% – An ownership group, headed by majority owner Ori Allon, including Eyal Chomsky, Shalom Menora, David Kleinhandler and Howard Wietschner.

The new ownership group and corporate management is considered among the most professionally diverse sports ownership groups in the world, as it includes a software developer, who sold two software companies to Google and Twitter (Allon), an American and Israeli real estate and hi-tech businessman (Menora), the CEO of Israel's leading media group (Chomsky), and a retired partner at Goldman Sachs (Wietschner).[8][9][10][11]

Staff

  • General manager: Guy Harel
  • Head coach: Simone Pianigiani
  • Assistant coaches: Marcelo Nicola and Modi Maor
  • Physiotherapists: Gadi Hadad and Yanai Barak
  • Team doctor: Dr. Jonathan (Jonty) Maresky
  • Orthopedist: Dr. Adi Fridman

Fans and arena

The Brigade

Brigade Malcha is the official fanclub for Hapoel Jerusalem B.C. In Malha Arena, the Brigade was located behind the south side basket. At the Jerusalem Arena, the Brigade is located in stands #1 and #12. The Brigade has close connections with the team itself, and is consulted by management on instrumental decisions, such as changing the team logo, and planning events with the community.

Rivalry with Maccabi Tel Aviv

Since the founding of the club in 1943, Hapoel Jerusalem has developed a major rivalry with Tel Aviv's leading basketball club Maccabi FOX Tel Aviv. Throughout the years, many games between the two teams became a part of the 'Hall of Fame' of Israeli basketball. The rivalry between the teams is very deep and emotional. Due to its vast size, the Jerusalem Arena has brought Israel's largest basketball rivalry to a whole new level.

Malha Arena (1985–2014)

Malha Arena

When Hapoel Jerusalem was founded, it initially played in a small court on Histadrut Street, in the city center, before moving to the Jerusalem International YMCA arena. In the mid-1950s, it moved to the only indoor arena in Jerusalem at that time, "the Straus Arena," in the Histadrut building, on Straus Street. Malha Arena was used as Hapoel Jerusalem's home area from 1985 to 2014. It has a seating capacity of 2,540 seats in its lower tier, with an additional 300 seats in its upper tier. Despite its small size, the arena traps in noise, and distracts the opposing team. This gives a boost to players towards the end of the game when they need it most, according to former coach of Hapoel Jerusalem, Oded Kattash.

Jerusalem Arena (2014–)

The Jerusalem Arena

Former Mayor of Jerusalem, and Prime Minister of Israel, Ehud Olmert, proposed the master plan for the arena in 2004, and it took ten years to build. Though the Jerusalem Arena is less than two kilometers from the team's previous home, which was opened in 1985, it is exponentially larger. The arena features 11,600 seats, four times as many as in Goldberg Arena, and all the modern amenities expected of a modern basketball venue. The stadium has twelve corporate boxes, each listed for $100,000 dollars per season. The site was chosen far back, but the building only took place in recent years. With an eye towards what the future might bring, the arena has been built to EuroLeague standards. Playing in the EuroLeague in the next few years, is a goal that the team has publicly set for itself.[12] The Jerusalem Arena was opened in the 2014–15 season.

Gallery of the Arena

Gallery of the Arena Corporate Boxes

Sponsors

The team's main corporate sponsor is Bank Yahav. Secondary sponsors include Burgers Bar, Crowne Plaza, Holiday Inn, and Ein Gedi Mineral Water.[13]

Current roster

Template:Hapoel Jerusalem BC

Depth chart

Pos. Starting 5 Bench 1 Bench 2
C Amar'e Stoudemire Shawn Jones Isaac Rosefelt
PF Lior Eliyahu Travis Peterson
SF Tarence Kinsey Dijon Thompson
SG Curtis Jerrells Yotam Halperin Bar Shefa
PG Bar Timor Jerome Dyson

Squad changes for 2016–17 season

In

Travis Peterson

Curtis Jerrells

Isaac Rosefelt

Jerome Dyson

Shawn Jones

Tarence Kinsey

Amar'e Stoudemire

Out

E.J. Rowland

Donta Smith

Eli Holman

Édgar Sosa

Josh Duncan

Tony Gaffney

Notable players

David Blatt

Notable coaches

Accomplishments

Season Israeli League Israeli Cup League Cup International Cup Head coach Leading players
1991–92 5th Korać Cup – Eighth-Final Round Gadi Kedar
Yoram Harush
Adi Gordon, Erez Hazan, Doron Shefa
1992–93 4th place Semi-finals Zvi Sherf
Yoram Harush
Adi Gordon, Erez Hazan, Doron Shefa, Norris Coleman
1993–94 3rd Semi-finals Korać Cup – Preliminary Round III Yoram Harush Adi Gordon, Norris Coleman, Miki Berkovich
1994–95 6th Semi-finalist Saporta Cup – Preliminary Round III Gadi Kedar Papi Turgeman, Billy Thompson
1995–96 2nd Champion Pini Gershon Adi Gordon, Doron Shefa, Norris Coleman, Papi Turgeman, Billy Thompson
1996–97 2nd Champion Saporta Cup – Quarter Finals Pini Gershon
Gadi Kedar
Adi Gordon, Doron Shefa, Papi Turgeman, Billy Thompson, Moti Daniel
1997–98 3rd Quarter-finals Euroleague – First preliminary stage Gadi Kedar
Effi Birnbaum
Kenny Williams, Radisav Ćurčić
1998–99 1st (regular season)
Lost in Final series
Finalist Saporta Cup – Eighth-Final Round Effi Birnbaum Papi Turgeman, Kenny Williams, Radisav Ćurčić, Derrick Hamilton
1999–00 7th (regular season) Finalist Saporta Cup – Eighth-Final Round Effi Birnbaum
Zvi Sherf
Papi Turgeman, Kenny Williams, Derrick Hamilton
2000–01 3rd (Regular Season)
Lost in Final series
Finalist Euroleague – Regular Season Zvi Sherf
Yoram Harush
Papi Turgeman, Kenny Williams, Meir Tapiro, Roger Huggins, Tony Dorsey
2001–02 3rd (Regular Season)
Lost in Semi-final series
Finalist Saporta Cup – Semi-finals Yoram Harush Meir Tapiro, Barak Peleg, Lamont Jones, Demetrius Alexander
2002–03 8th (Regular Season) Semi-finals EuroCup Challenge – Second Group stage Erez Edelstein
Gadi Kedar
Moshe Mizrahi, Gerald Brown
2003–04 5th (Regular Season) Finalist ULEB Cup – Champion Sharon Drucker Ido Kozikaro, Doron Sheffer, Will Solomon, Kelly McCarty, Tunji Awojobi
2004–05 4th (Regular Season)
Lost in quarter-finals series
Eighth-Finals ULEB Cup – Regular Season Sharon Drucker Ido Kozikaro, Rickey Paulding, Jason Wells
2005–06 2nd (Regular Season)
Lost in Final
Finalist ULEB Cup – Semi-finals Erez Edelstein Meir Tapiro, Mario Austin, Horace Jenkins, Roger Mason
2006–07 2nd (Regular Season)
Lost in Final
Champion 3rd ULEB Cup – Quarter Finals Dan Shamir Meir Tapiro, Mario Austin, Timmy Bowers, Dror Hajaj, Terence Morris
2007–08 5th (Regular Season) Champion Finalist ULEB Cup – Sixteenth-Finals Dan Shamir
Ziv Erez
Timmy Bowers, Dror Hajaj, Sharon Shason, Jamie Arnold, Guy Pnini
2008–09 2nd (Regular Season)
4th in Final Four
Semi-finals Champion EuroChallenge – Regular Season Guy Goodes Timmy Bowers, Sharon Shason, Yuval Naimy, Travis Watson, Omar Sneed
2009–10 2nd (Regular Season)
3rd in Final Four
Eighth-Finals Champion Eurocup – Quarter Finals Guy Goodes Yuval Naimy, Tre Simmons, Dijon Thompson
2010–11 3rd (Regular Season)
3rd in Final Four
Quarter-finals Finalist Eurocup – Regular Season Oded Kattash Yuval Naimy, Will Solomon, Brian Randle, Yogev Ohayon
2011–12 4th (Regular Season)
Lost in quarter-finals Series
Eighth-Finals Semi-finals Eurocup – Regular Season Oded Kattash
Sharon Drucker
Yuval Naimy, Brian Randle, D. J. Strawberry
2012–13 5th (Regular Season)
Lost in semi-finals series
Semi-finals Semi-finals Eurocup – Regular season Sharon Drucker Meir Tapiro, Raviv Limonad, Josh Duncan, Courtney Fells
2013–14 2nd (Regular season)
Lost in semi-finals Series
Eighth-Finals Finalist Eurocup – Quarter finals Brad Greenberg Josh Duncan, Yotam Halperin, Lior Eliyahu
2014–15 2nd (Regular season)
Champion
Finalist Champion Eurocup – First Round Danny Franco Donta Smith, Yotam Halperin, Lior Eliyahu

Historical Club Logos and Emblems Since 1943

Honours

Total titles: 10

Domestic

Israeli Championships

State Cup

  • Winners (4): 1996, 1997, 2007, 2008
  • Runner-up (7): 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2015

League Cup

European

ULEB Cup

References

  1. ^ http://www.eurocupbasketball.com/eurocup/competition/seasons/2003-04
  2. ^ Schonbrun, Zach (November 19, 2014). "Israeli Military Stalls a College Career". New York Times. Retrieved September 9, 2014. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ "Amar'e Stoudemire May Head to Israel After Contract". The Wall Street Journal. April 15, 2014. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
  4. ^ Berman, Marc (April 14, 2014). "Amar'e may leave Knicks for Jerusalem team after 2015". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
  5. ^ "Amar'e Stoudemire joins Hapoel Jerusalem!". Hapoel.co.il. August 1, 2016. Retrieved August 1, 2016.
  6. ^ http://www.jpost.com/Sports/Rebuilding-in-full-swing-at-Hap-Jlem-Franco-Smith-incoming-360228
  7. ^ Sinai, Allon (June 26, 2014). "Hapoel Jerusalem handed Euroleague qualifying berth". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
  8. ^ http://www.linkedin.com/pub/c-howard-wietschner/14/583/1b
  9. ^ http://www.eurocupbasketball.com/eurocup/features/club-scene/i/134422/3736/the-club-scene-hapoel-jerusalem-looks-to-bright-future
  10. ^ http://directors.dundb.co.il/Details/Company.aspx?duns=514651152
  11. ^ http://www.amarestoudemire.com/2014/hapoel-jerusalem-looks-bright-future/
  12. ^ Sachs, Frankie (March 21, 2014). "The Club Scene: Hapoel Jerusalem looks to bright future". Eurocup Basketball. Retrieved September 9, 2014. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ http://www.one.co.il/Article/235302.html