Ilan Bakhar

Ilan Bakhar (Hebrew: אילן בכר; born May 17, 1975 in Ramat Gan) is a retired Israeli footballer, who played as a right defender.

Ilan Bakhar
Personal information
Date of birth (1975-05-17) May 17, 1975
Place of birth Ramat Gan, Israel
Height 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Playing position(s) Right back
Youth career
1990–1993 Hapoel Ramat Gan
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1993–1995 Hapoel Ramat Gan 41 (2)
1995–1998 Maccabi Herzliya 62 (9)
1998–1999 Beitar Jerusalem 25 (0)
1999–2002 Hapoel Tel Aviv 79 (4)
2002–2003 Racing Santander 2 (0)
2003–2004 FC Ashdod 27 (2)
2004–2005 Sporting Braga B 2 (0)
2005–2006 Maccabi Herzliya 31 (1)
2006–2007 Hakoah Ramat Gan 10 (0)
2007 Hapoel Nazareth Illit 13 (0)
2007 Hapoel Be'er Sheva 2 (0)
National team
2000–2003 Israel 6 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Football career

During his 14-year professional career, Bakhar played for seven different clubs in his country. He also had two unassuming stints abroad: with Racing de Santander in Spain, being part of the first pair of Israelis to sign with the Cantabrians, alongside Yossi Benayoun, and playing only twice during the season, and in Portugal with Sporting de Braga (no appearances).

Bakhar gained six caps for the national team, in a three-year span.

Honours

gollark: It's *.
gollark: This is not very accurate, though.
gollark: In a market, if people don't want kale that much, the kale company will probably not have much money and will not be able to buy all the available fertilizer.
gollark: You can just hand out what some random people think is absolutely *needed* first, then stick the rest of everything up for public use, but that won't work either! Someone has to decide on the "needed", so you get into a planned-economy sort of situation, and otherwise... what happens when, say, the community kale farm decides they want all the remaining fertilizer, even when people don't want *that* much kale?
gollark: Planned economies, or effectively-planned-by-lots-of-voting economies, will have to implement this themselves by having everyone somehow decide where all the hundred million things need to go - and that's not even factoring in the different ways to make each thing, or the issues of logistics.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.