Shaul Matania

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Shaul Matania
Personal information
Date of birth (1937-03-08)8 March 1937
Place of birth Tel Aviv, Mandatory Palestine
Date of death 20 July 2017(2017-07-20) (aged 80)
Place of death Israel
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s) Defender
Youth career
1949–195? Maccabi Tel Aviv
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1953–1966 Maccabi Tel Aviv 253 (1)
1966–1968? Maccabi Holon
1968–19?? Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov
19??–1971 Hapoel Kfar Shalem
International career
Israel 17 (0)
Managerial career
1966–1968? Maccabi Holon (player-coach)
1968–19?? Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov (player-coach)
19??–1971 Hapoel Kfar Shalem (player-coach)
1971–197? Hapoel Giv'at Shmuel
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Shaul Matania (8 March 1937 – 20 July 2017) was an Israeli footballer who played in defender positions. He played for Maccabi Tel Aviv and the Israel national team. Matania won the title Israeli Footballer of the Year for the 1961–62 season.[1]

Club career[edit]

Matania started his football career in 1949, at the age of 12, when he joined the boys' team of Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1953, when only 16, Matania joined the senior team.[2] He was the defensive stronghold of the team for thirteen years.

Matania scored four times in cup games, of which two goals were penalties, and once in a league game.[3] On 22 June 1957, Matania scored an equalizing goal in the 119th minute, virtually at end of the extension of the national cup semifinals,[1] after Shlomo Nahari had shot Hapoel Petah Tikva to 2–1 in the 98th minute. Mantania's great stunt as a Tel Aviv defender in the Haifa Municipal Stadium was eventually to no avail, as Petah Tikva won 2–0 in the replay of the semifinals.

Until leaving Maccabi Tel Aviv's senior team in 1966, Matania won three national championships and six national cups. He had 253 caps in league games and 39 in cup games.[3] A cool fact is that he never entered a game on the senior team as a replacement.[3]

International career[edit]

Matania earned 17 caps with the Israel national team.[4] His debut was on 11 July 1956, in Moscow, in the pre-Olympic tournament against the Soviet Union national football team.[4] In 1959 he played in the six qualifying games of the Asia Cup in India, among these a 3–0 victory over Iran and 3–1 victory over India.[5] Israel ended first in the qualifying round, yet Matania missed out on the 1960 finals in South Korea, where Israel ended second.

The last game in which Matania played for the national team was in 1961 when the Yugoslavia national football team beat Israel 2–0 in Ramat Gan.[4] As a bencher, he was on the national team for many more years to come.

Managerial career[edit]

From 1966 to 1971, Matania was a player-coach at Maccabi Holon in Israel's second tier, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov (starting in 1968) in Israel's third tier, and Hapoel Kfar Shalem, also in Israel's third tier. In 1971, Matania quit his player career and became the manager of Hapoel Giv'at Shmuel.

Personal and death[edit]

Next to and after his football career, Matania worked as a PE educator.[1]

Matania died on 20 July 2017 at the age of 80.[2] He was buried at kibbutz Einat.[2]

Honours[edit]

  • 1 Israeli Footballer of the Year: 1961-62
  • 1 Asia Cup: 1964 (plus runner-up in 1956)
  • 3 National Championships: 1953–54, 1955–56, 1957–58
  • 6 National Football Cup: 1953–54, 1954–55, 1957–58, 1958–59, 1963–64, 1964–65
  • 1 Super cup: 1955–56

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Doron, Alex (6 May 1962). "תגובה ראשונה של מתניה: 'יופי!'" [First reaction by Matania: 'Great!']. Maariv.
  2. ^ a b c Sheinman, Moshe (20 July 2017). "שחקן העבר שאול מתניה הלך לעולמו" [Former player Shaul Manania passed away]. Yediot Ahronot (in Hebrew). מגן נבחרת ישראל לשעבר, שזכה עם מכבי תל אביב בשלוש אליפויות בשנות ה-50', נפטר בגיל 80. ההלוויה תיערך ביום שישי ב-12:00 בקיבוץ עינת
  3. ^ a b c "שאול מתניה" [Shaul Matania]. Maccabipedia (in Hebrew).
  4. ^ a b c Rosemblum, Israel (2 July 1966). "מתניה נפרד ממכבי ת"א לאחר 17 שנות שרות" [Matania parts from Maccabi TA after 17 years of service]. Maariv (in Hebrew) – via National Library of Israel.
  5. ^ "ישראל גברה על נבחרת הודו בכדורגל; רפי לוי הבקיע את שלושת השערים" [Israel beat the Indian football team; Rafi Levi scored the three goals]. Kol HaAm. 9 December 1959. p. 1.