Maccabi London team win Pesach Cup
In what has now become a permanent fixture in the Anglo-Israel calendar, a visiting Maccabi London Rep Team and Israeli Rep Team from the Olim league, contested the latest Pesach Cup.
An unusually large crowd came to the Wingate stadium in Netanya on the warmest day of the year with temperatures touching 30*C. The visitors had their largest and youngest squad out with several new faces and four teenagers in the ranks.
Starting brightly the Londoners lined up with veteran keeper and skipper Dan Jacobs between the posts and a solid back four of Rob Murray, Ben Grabiner , Max Kyte and Joel Barnett.
The midfield trio of Ben Weinberg, Elliot Espinoza and David Smouha bossed the middle of the park and with the flanks controlled by Matt Perlman and Oscar Wagman lone striker David Dinkin had plenty of support.
Early domination soon turned into chances and after neat play from Smouha and Perlman on 20 minutes there was no complaint when Perlman was fouled in the box and a spot kick was correctly given. The penalty was coolly slotted away by Max Kyte to give a deserved lead.
The lead was doubled after 30 minutes when great play on the left-hand side by subs Joey Lazare and Joe Metliss linking with Zac Konstabler and the ever sharp Dinkin ghosted in for his customary goal.
However, with the heat affecting the visitors the Olim team got one back and this time Jacobs who had saved the day on more than one occasion stood no chance and at the interval the visitors led 2-1.
The second half started brightly and with rolling subs essential Danny Daggers and Marco Laurence adding fresh skill and legs the visitors piled on the pressure. Dutch veteran Michael Abrahams slotted into defence and the visitors kept pressing for the third goal to put the game out of sight.
But the experienced Olim team with former GB Maccabiah players Motti Colman and Nick Plotnick giving their all continued to press and with five minutes to go an equaliser came, much to the dismay of the evergreen Jacobs in the visitors goal. The game ended even and so the Cup would be decided by the dreaded penalty shoot-out.
After five penalties and four scored by both teams, the Pesach Cup would have to be decided by sudden-death. The first for each side was successfully converted and with the Olim team missing their 7 th it was left for Konstabler to step up and win the Cup and he did not disappoint.
And so for the first time the Pesach Cup is in the hands of the Maccabi London rep team who will be returning to defend their trophy at the same time next year.
Keep community journalism free.
Jewish News is free for everyone. No paywall. No barriers. Just trusted journalism for anyone who wants to stay connected to Jewish life in Britain.
If you value that, please support us.
From as little as £5 a month, you can help keep our journalism free and accessible to all.
Every day, we report on the issues that matter to our community. We celebrate achievements, support charities, challenge antisemitism and ensure Jewish voices are heard more widely.
From as little as £5 a month, you can help us continue to:
- Report on the stories shaping Jewish life in the UK and beyond
- Bring our community together through shared stories, events and campaigns
- Celebrate the people, culture and moments that define our community
- Support organisations doing vital work across Jewish Britain
You can make a one-off donation or become a regular supporter. Every contribution helps keep our journalism free, independent and accessible to all.
If everyone who values Jewish News gave a small amount, it would make a real difference to our future.



















