Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israel, fresh off a draw with France, stuns Belgium 1-0

Despite the historic victory, the Blue and White were relegated from the UEFA Nations League top tier.

Midfielder Ethane Azoulay of Israel in action during the UEFA Nations League 2024/25 League Group A2 match between Israel and Belgium at Bozsik Arena in Budapest on Nov. 17, 2024. Photo by David Balogh/Getty Images.
Midfielder Ethane Azoulay of Israel in action during the UEFA Nations League 2024/25 League Group A2 match between Israel and Belgium at Bozsik Arena in Budapest on Nov. 17, 2024. Photo by David Balogh/Getty Images.

Israel scored a stunning 1-0 soccer win over European powerhouse Belgium in Budapest on Sunday, but it was not enough to avoid relegation from the UEFA Nations League’s top tier.

The Blue and White finished fourth in the League A Group 2 standings, despite the impressive defeat of Belgium off the foot of Yarden Shua in the 86th minute to break the deadlock. Israel needed two more goals to relegate the Red Devils instead.

Belgium is ranked 6th in the latest FIFA men’s world rankings, while Israel is ranked 81st.

Heavyweights Italy and France were also in the group. Israel tied the latter 0-0 on Nov. 14, in a tense match played at the Stade de France that was marred by minor violence in the stands and outside the venue amid Israel’s war against Iranian-backed terrorist groups in Gaza and Lebanon.

The match, held in the heavily Muslim suburb of Saint-Denis north of Paris, came a week after mass assaults by Muslims on Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam following a match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax.

Sunday’s match was played at the Hungarian pitch of Bozsik Aréna, and was technically a home game for the Israelis because of the war. Only 675 fans attended the match at the 8,200-capacity facility. The game was played in dense fog.

Joshua Marks is a news editor on the Jerusalem desk at JNS.org, where he covers Jewish affairs, the Middle East and global news.
Matt Dorsey is “absolutely right to call out Piker, whose rhetoric is misogynistic, violent and traffics in conspiracy theories, antisemitism and hate speech,” according to the JCRC in San Francisco.
Kimberly Richey, assistant U.S. secretary of education for civil rights, stated that “such institutional neglect will not be tolerated.”
The governor’s office is awaiting information from the federal government about whether there are any “poison pills that could harm New York’s education system,” a spokesman told JNS.
“It will take at least a decade to rehabilitate,” said Orit Sulitzeanu, CEO of the Israeli Association of Rape Crisis Centers.
Texas American Muslim University at Dallas founder and board chairman Shahid A. Bajwa told JNS the program is “actively engaging” with the state education board after receiving a cease-and-desist letter halting operations.
The crowdsourced encyclopedia hasn’t repaired the “content contamination” that the banned editors left behind, according to Shlomit Lir, of University of Haifa.