Tikteknu: today's summary clip in sports, 8.1 (Sport1)
The great tensions between Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Jerusalem spilled over the weekend into social networks, following the threats made by "Radio Jerusalem" broadcaster, Elad Amadi, against Hapoel fans, when he said, ""I will prove to you why it would be worth it for me to sit in a prison because of people like you" .
After yesterday's derby (1:1) the journalist Haim Levinson also caused a stir online with a post that drew many condemnations.
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Amadi said that "I and many other friends, Beitar Jerusalem fans, are ready to come to Hapoel games regularly, not to support the opposing team - but to stand and see who won, from the extreme leftists, these scumbag anarchists, these are the same people who want to beat up IDF soldiers." Most of them are 'Silence Breakers' and 'Betzlem' and all the Israel-hating organizations that have taken over the stadium, and threaten the Hapoel fans that if they bring Israeli flags to the stadium they will be beaten... So I am currently recruiting lions, who want to stand there the whole game... and I I want to see one man... these anarchist scum who throw the Israeli flag... I will prove to you why it would be worth it for me to sit in jail for someone like you. It's not a threat, it's a promise."
Hapoel Yerushalayim reported that "we were amazed to listen to the words, it is a border crossing that turns on all the red lights. We take these wild, abusive and agitated statements very seriously, especially on the eve of a derby game."
As expected, there was tension between the clubs yesterday too, when in Hapoel's equalizer, coach Ziv Aryeh turned to the crowd and celebrated defiantly, after he said he had been cursed the whole game.
After Hapoel Jerusalem's condemnation of the radio station, Beitar Jerusalem officials said: "We saw very well the provocations of Hapoel Jerusalem's bench, so let's not be innocent, including threats and screaming towards our audience."
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In addition, Beitar expressed disgust this morning at the tweet of journalist Haim Levinson, a Hapoel Jerusalem fan, who, according to club officials, "tweeted a racist and repulsive tweet and then deleted it after an attack from Beitar fans who flooded him and even caused his account to be blocked."
Levinson deleted his offensive tweet, which shows a picture with a stand with Beitar fans and the caption "Monkeys' feeding time has come," since, according to him, "I had a long conversation with a Beitar fan. He talked to me at length about the stigma that Beit fans have." R and the tendency to describe them with a derogatory nickname that often involves negative stereotypes towards Mizrahi.
My tweet referred to a group that wants to beat us up and I failed in a phrase that has no place either on Twitter or on a football field.
I should have been more sensitive about it.
I was wrong, sorry, I apologize."
sport
trash talk
Tags
Haim Levinson
Beitar Jerusalem
Hapoel Jerusalem in football