After the victory of Maccabi Tel Aviv in KS, Barak Bachar and his players withstood the pressure and narrowed the gap from the top to only one point
Lavie in a frenzy, tonight in Bloomfield
Photo:
Alan Shiver
Haziza swings Menachem after the second goal, tonight at Bloomfield
Photo:
Alan Shiver
In frustrated Chirai, tonight
Photo:
Alan Shiver
No forces.
A season or two ago, Bnei Yehuda was the team that the greats feared, a kind of black sheep that can always destroy and spoil.
It's just that this season the Oranges can't tickle teams like Maccabi Haifa and the game between them at Bloomfield, which was on one side and Josh Cohen had to hold on so as not to fall asleep.
The pressure that Maccabi Haifa exerted on the host in the first half was constant.
As a result the Oranges looked scared, tried to keep balls as far away as they could without an address and the first goal was in the air for long minutes, but it did not come in that half.
And at the half-time break some of the Bnei Yehuda fans, those who decided to come despite their protest against owner Barak Abramov, teased the noble male Omar into the minors affair.
So the connection started engines, made a fantastic personal move and wonderfully cooked the first for Neta Lavie.
A few minutes later Noble picked up a corner that Barak Levy somehow blamed for San Menachem who scored the second.
Noble also had to score at least one or two goals, but suffered from bad luck in front of goal and missed, but these goals will also come and is definitely a significant weapon for the Greens in the championship fight against Maccabi Tel Aviv. And what about Bnei Yehuda? Look for points in it but it's hard to see them coming out of the great blessing.