Name
Hapoel Petah Tikva

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FC Ashdod vs Hapoel Petah Tikva (27 Apr)

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League Position
14

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Established
1934 (90 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Stadium/Home
HaMoshava Stadium
(11,500 Capacity)

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Location
Petah Tikva, Israel

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Competitions
Israeli Premier League

Last Edit
curswine: 01/Apr/21


Upcoming
27/04 FC Ashdod - Hapoel Petah
04/05 Hapoel Petah - Hapoel Jerus
11/05 Maccabi Peta - Hapoel Petah
18/05 Hapoel Petah - Maccabi Neta

Results
21/04 Hapoel Petah 0 - 2 Beitar Jerus
13/04 Hapoel Tel-A 1 - 1 Hapoel Petah
30/03 Hapoel Hader 1 - 1 Hapoel Petah
16/03 Hapoel Jerus 3 - 2 Hapoel Petah
09/03 Hapoel Petah 2 - 2 Maccabi Peta

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Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. (Hebrew: הפועל פתח תקווה‎) is an Israeli football club based in the city of Petah Tikva. Their most successful period was the late 1950s and early 1960s, in which the club won six championships, five of them in consecutive seasons. Although they have not won the title since 1963, Hapoel still hold the record for the number of back-to-back titles. The club's last piece of major silverware came in 2005 when they won the Toto Cup, and of all the clubs to have won the State Cup, Hapoel have the worst record in the finals, having won on only two of their nine appearances in the final.

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Stadium or Home

The HaMoshava Stadium (Hebrew: אִצְטַדְיוֹן הַמוֹשָׁבָה‎), also known as Petah Tikva Stadium, is a football stadium in Petah Tikva, Israel. It was completed in 2011, and is used mainly for football matches and is home to both Hapoel Petah Tikva and Maccabi Petah Tikva.

The stadium has an all-seated capacity of 11,500 with an option for further construction of 8,500 on the south and north stands, totaling 20,000 seats.

As part of a larger sports park in the new industrial area of the city, the complex will also boast a 3,000 seat multi-purpose arena, and artificial turf training fields. The budget for the stadium was US$25 million.

The designers of the new stadium were GAB (Goldshmidt Arditty Ben Nayim) Architects, one of Israel's leading sport architecture firms that also designed the new Netanya Stadium and Haberfeld Stadium.

The stadium was inaugurated on 6 December 2011, after almost two years of construction. It was one of four venues for the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship, staging three group matches and a semi-final.

The stadium's naming was controversial in Petah Tikva, as some local residents wished to name it Rosh HaZahav (Gold head), after local city club Hapoel Petah Tikva and Israel national football player Nahum Stelmach. As a result, Maccabi Petah Tikva supporters proposed to name the stadium after Shmuel Ben-Dror, that played in the club for more than twenty years, was Israel first captain and scored the first ever goal for Israel. After the city's refusal it was named HaMoshava after Petah Tikva's nickname, Em HaMoshavot (Mother of the Moshavot).

In 2014 HaMoshava Stadium hosted the 2014 United Supercup.

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