Jonny Hardy
Israeli footballer (1934–2017)
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Yonatan Hardy | ||
Date of birth | (1934-06-02) 2 June 1934 (age 90) | ||
Place of birth | Haifa, Mandate Palestine | ||
Date of death | 6 November 2017(2017-11-06) (aged 83) | ||
Place of death | Haifa, Israel | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1951–1963 | Maccabi Haifa | 193 | (70) |
1963–1966 | Beitar Haifa | ||
1966–1968 | Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Yonatan "Jonny" Hardy (June 2, 1934 – November 6, 2017) was an Israeli footballer. He was best known for his years at Maccabi Haifa where he started his football career as well as his managerial career.[1]
Childhood
Though born in Haifa, Hardy grew up in Egypt since his father worked for the rail company, then under British control.
References
- ^ "Mac Haifa turns page with Allach appointment". The Jerusalem Post. 17 November 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
External links
- Jonny Hardy Maccabi Haifa (in Hebrew)
- v
- t
- e
Maccabi Haifa F.C. – managers
- Schwartz (1946–47)
- Taurentauer (1950–52)
- Schlefenberg (1952–54)
- Fuchs (1954–56)
- Kisch (1956–57)
- Koch (1957–59)
- Farkash (1959–61)
- Forbes (1961–62)
- Kisch (1962)
- Schlefenberg (1962–63)
- Spasov (1963–65)
- Halibner (1965)
- Menchel (1965–69)
- Schmilovich (1969–70)
- Hardy (1970–72)
- Menchel (1972–74)
- Weinberg (1974–75)
- Shinar (1975–77)
- Sasson (1977)
- Fuchs (1977)
- Hardy (1977–78)
- Kulik (1978–79)
- Spiegler (1979)
- Hardy (1979–82)
- Mansell (1982–83)
- Scharf (1983–87)
- Kashtan (1987–88)
- Levkovic (1988–90)
- Scharf (1990–92)
- Spiegel (1993–98)
- Brailovsky (1998)
- Uhrin (1998–99)
- Cohen (1999–2000)
- R. Levyc (2000)
- Grant (2000–02)
- Shum (2002–03)
- R. Levy (2003–08)
- E. Levy (2008–12)
- Atar (2012)
- Benado (2012–14)
- Stanojević (2014)
- Balbul (2014–15)
- R. Levy (2015–16)
- Meulensteen (2016–17)
- Luzon (2017)
- Maasc (2017–18)
- Rutten (2018)
- Guttman (2018)
- Balbul (2018–20)
- Bakhar (2020–23)
- Dego (2023–24)
- Bakhar (2024–)
This biographical article relating to Israeli football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e