Arguably the top basketball franchises in Israel, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Jerusalem appointed new coaches to guide their respective clubs for the 2022/23 season.
The Yellow & Blue brought in a face that has been associated with the team since the 1990’s in Oded Katash who came onto the scene as one of the generational talents in Israeli basketball, even earning a place in the NBA which unfortunately never panned out. Over in the capital city, one of the most colorful characters to roam the sidelines in Serbian Aleksandar Džikić will take over the reins of the Reds and in known to be one who can squeeze the last drops of lemonade from the lemon.
After a disastrous season in which Maccabi came up empty in league and cup play under Ioannis Sfairopulos who began the season and Avi Even who mercifully ended it, a change at Maccabi was in the cards. But very quickly they saw that their number one target in Spaniard Xavi Pascual was not going to find his way from Zenit St. Petersburg to the Holy Land and the Euroleague outfit understood that the coaching market was quite thin.
With very few foreign candidates available, management decided to make a move that surprised many in appointing legendary coach David Blatt as the chairman of the professional committee and consultant in order to get the boat back afloat.
With the committee of sporting director Nikola Vujcic and head of scouting Avi Even, Blatt was able to steer the ship towards someone who he not only knows extremely well, but someone that he trusts in, Oded Katash. Whether it was with Trueplayer or coaching his son Tamir at Hapoel Jerusalem and the Israel National team as Katash always was able to put the diminutive point guard in the best position to succeed to go along with a proven track record on the sidelines. It should also be noted that Blatt Jr. just captured the German League championship with ALBA Berlin, scoring 14 points while having an exceptional year.
Sure, Maccabi could have brought in Katash back in the winter when Ioannis Sfairopulos was relieved of his duties, but at that time the club was only willing to offer the one time prodigy a contract to finish out the season in order to keep their options open. Katash himself referenced this in his introductory press conference that things just didn’t work out and it wasn’t the right time.
Now Katash said, that this moment is the right place at the right time for him to make his return to the Yad Eiliyahu bench, a place that he is familiar with having been in charge of the Yellow & Blue for roughly 6 months when he was named head coach back in 2007. A much younger and greener Katash had nowhere near the same experience that he has now. Winning the 2010 Israeli league title with Hapoel Gilboa Galil over Maccabi in 2010, leading Hapoel Eilat to success and honing his own skills down south by the Red Sea while also guiding Hapoel Jerusalem to back-to-back State Cup in 2019 and 2020.
There is no question that Katash wasn’t able to take the Reds to the league finals in those two full seasons as bench boss which saw the 2019 campaign end in the semis against Rishon Le’Zion without an injured Chris Johnson. The following year, Jerusalem once again succumbed to Rishon and Adam Ariel’s crazy corer triple as time expired as the club was also without some of their top stars in J’Covan Brown and Tashawn Thomas who left the country due to COVID-19.
As someone who has covered Katash’s time in Jerusalem game in and game out both at home and on the road, there is no question that the experience gained was second to none. He became a true player’s coach as ballers love to hoop for him. He is straight and honest with those around him and will be critical when he has to be as he pulls no punches.
However, Katash understands that the Euroleague and a team like Maccabi are not anything like Jerusalem or Eilat but much similar to Panathinaikos where he coached the final half of the 2020/21 season and admitted that there were some things that he learnt and saw during his time in Greece that will help him back in yellow-and-blue.
For Katash to succeed it will ultimately come down to adjustments which is what he saw first hand at the OAKA Arena in Athens and that is something that he needs to work on with Maccabi. In game adjustments will be critical in ensuring that his time at Yad Eliyahu will be fruitful and not just coming in with a game plan that he won’t veer left or right from which is something he had done in the past.
But Katash will also need the players who can play his style of basketball and that fit into his philosophy as a coach. Should be not get the correct players he will also struggle in implementing his way to hoop, his offense and his defense as he so eloquently explained when he met the media. That is also true for the staff around him that he is still in the process of putting together.
If Katash receives the backing from the professional committee which certainly looks very positive due to Blatt’s involvement then he will have a chance to do some great things. If not then Katash’s time will be as difficult as it was the first time around, a decade and a half ago. However, with everyone hopefully on the same page, Katash who is the first Israeli coach appointed at the start of the season since Erez Edelstein was back in in 2016, will thrive and as he commented do some great things and bring plenty of excitement to Yad Eliyahu.
Over in Jerusalem, Aleksandar Džikić is tasked with turning around a team that has ultimately been an afterthought since Oded Katash left during the winter of 2021. The appointment of Danius Adomaitis was met with great hope by management leading to owner Eyal Homsky saying what a great hire and that he will bring the club a championship. But just a couple of short months later, assistant coach Yonatan Alon was named as interim to replace the Lithuanian bench boss and Jerusalem quietly ended another season in disappointment.
Oren Amiel was next in line for the Reds as expectations were high that the Israeli who had been in charge of one of the more successful teams in Eastern Europe Nymburk. But truth be told, the Czech League was nowhere near and up to par with the Israeli league and the tactician was quickly overwhelmed and out of work in the capital city. In came sports director Yotam Halperin who had mixed results in continental competition and league play, ultimately coming up short against Holon in a best of 3 semifinal series.
While the talk on the street was that it was up to Halperin to decide himself if he would stay on or go back to his front office job, Jerusalem swooped in and surprised many by snagging the Džikić who was not given an extension by Buducnost.
There is no question that Džikić has one of the best basketball minds out there and has collected a trophy case that can rival some of the best but it will still be a test to see how he will be able to do in Jerusalem, who just like Maccabi will need to give him to ability to succeed. Džikić will give his utmost to the team, club, city and provide all of the color that he has done for years as he took teams with minimal budgets to great accomplishments. But his time at Estudiantes was a relative disaster as he was let go midway through the 2019/20 season with only 4 wins in 18 games in a campaign that saw the team finish in 18th place but were spared relegation due to COVID-19.
Both Jerusalem and Džikić can’t afford a season like that in the capital. The Reds need to become a power as they had once been and while they finished the regular season in first place, in a season where no team really stood out in the regular season, they went out with a whimper as it was clear they had plenty of deficiencies.
CEO Guy Harel and Owner Eyal Homsky will look to try and bring the glory back to the Arena but they had tremendous issues getting fannies in the seats for elimination games, playoff games and especially regular season games. Jerusalem desperately needs to get off to a good start and build off of the momentum.
Džikić has said that he is an expert in getting the most out of a low budget team and his style of play when it comes down to it is to win games. He will need to be able to do both of those things to succeed and bring the buzz back to Jerusalem.
While the offseason extracurricular get underway both Maccabi and Jerusalem know full well that the next few weeks may determine their respective upcoming seasons. They can bring in exciting names, well-known names and no names but at the end of the day, the name of the game is to win. And that is what both fan bases expect. To see Hapoel Holon beginning to steal both of the franchises thunder by winning the league title against Bnei Herzliya should have set the alarm bells off.
We will find out soon enough if they actually heard it.
0 Comments