The Early years The beginning of the club was in a local organization in 1924 that was established in the
Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem (present-day Israel). This organization included several branches related to sports, in addition to branches related to worker movements and the
Histadrut. Their goal was to found the first ever
labor football club in Palestine, like those around the world. The most acceptable version of the club's establishment says that the meeting took place during
Passover, on 24 April 1924, at a house in
Haifa, including 36 representatives of the different authorities. The meeting was led by Yehoshua Sherpstein and Yair Aharony. On 1 May 1924,
Labor Day, was the first match, in which Hapoel Haifa beat 3–1 the train workers of Haifa. In the first years of the club it played mainly friendly matches against different teams from Palestine, Europe, and the Middle East (Since the
Football Association was yet to be established, there were no formal matches). At the beginning Hapoel Haifa was included under the Maccabi union, since it was the only union at that time. Two years later the club decided to leave Maccabi, and was among the founders of the new union, Hapoel. In 1928 the
Israel Football Association (IFA) was founded, and formal matches were scheduled: In the first 4 years only cup matches, and afterwards league matches were added. During these years Hapoel Haifa did not win many trophies, yet it was still one of the leading teams in the country. In 1932 the team qualified to its first cup final, against the British Police. The referee was British, and some of the decisions he made were very controversial. During the match, when the score was 1–0 to Hapoel Haifa (goal by Yonah Stern), after some decisions that the players of Haifa found very odd and unfair, one of Haifa players stole the cup. As a result, Hapoel Haifa was disqualified. That year 5 of Haifa's players made it to the Palestine squad.
The Fifties In 1950, after the
1947–1949 Palestine war, the Israeli League returned to action, and Haifa finished in the 3rd place, after
Maccabi and
Hapoel Tel Aviv. Two years later the cup matches were renewed. These years were direct continuation to the seasons before the state of Israel was established, when the team was one of the leaders, yet did not manage to win any trophies.
The Sixties and The Seventies Hapoel Haifa was very weak in the early sixties. The team finished 1962–63 one before last, and was supposed to relegate to the
second division. But, due to suspicions about improper matches, the relegations were canceled (many say that this was due to the connections of the heads of Hapoel in the IFA). At this turning point, many talented young players promoted from the
youth team, causing a significant improvement that started the club's best period. In the same season, 1962–63, the club won the
Israel State Cup, after beating
Maccabi Haifa in the final 1–0. In all of the following seasons the team finished in the top third of the league, and qualified to the cup final three more times. The main players of the team at that time were
Abba Gindin, Yitzhak Englander,
Yochanan Vollach and
Roby Young. These players were some of the greatest players in
Israeli football in the 1960s and the 1970s and were part of the
Israel national team for many years. Roby Young was even the
captain of the national team. In 1974 Hapoel Haifa won the Israeli cup again. In those years the club's leading players began to leave it, including the shocking transfer of Englander and Vollach to the bitter rival Maccabi Haifa, due to Hapoel's poor management. Although the team finished 2nd in 1975, a great fall began, leading to the big crush of the 1980s.
The-eighties: The Downfall In 1981 the team relegated, for the first time ever, to the second division. Until then it was one of the 3 clubs that never relegated (alongside Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv). That was the beginning of the worst decade in the club's history. Even the signing of
Peter Lorimer, one of the greatest players of
Leeds United, as manager, didn't help and he left several months later. The big crisis in the Histadrut led to a
financial crisis in the club, which was on the verge of bankruptcy. The crisis hit also the administrative side, and directors were replaced frequently. Near the end of the 1980s, three former players of the club,
Yitzhak Englander,
Avi Kaufman and
Efraim Gabay, took the club to their hands as an exterior organization, hoping to save the club from bankruptcy, yet due to lack of funding sources they couldn't solve the financial crisis in the club.
The Nineties: The Age of Shapira In 1992 the team promoted to the
first division in the second time. That season was accompanied with rumors about an anonymous businessman who took responsibility on the club. Ultimately, the anonymous was turned out to be
Robi Shapira, a businessman who made his fortune in the fishing business in
Nigeria. Shapira gave big amounts of money to the club and saved it from financial collapse. That money was used to purchase many leading players, but the team made no remarkable achievement and was still at relegating danger. Following a long streak of losses during the season of 1993–94 Shapira decided to buy the club from the Histadrut. In the first years under Shapira many great players and managers were brought to the team, yet it could not win trophies and achieve the club's great ambition:
championship.
1998–99: The Championship In 1997–98 Hapoel Haifa reached 3rd place, with
Eli Guttman as manager. The following season the team was tagged as a top team, but not as a candidate for championship. In spite of the predictions, a streak of impressive victories put Haifa in the 1st place, with a big advantage over the rest of the league. Hapoel Haifa showed a very tactical and effective style of
football that dragged criticism from different sources, such as the media and other teams. Hapoel Haifa remained in the 1st place and increased its advantage over other teams. On Saturday, 8 May 1999, in the 27th round of the league, Hapoel Haifa competed with
Maccabi Tel Aviv, who was 2nd before that round, in
Kiryat Eliezer Stadium. Hapoel Haifa won the match 3–2 (two goals by
Oren Zeituni and one more by Oren Nissim) and was crowned as champion, for the first (and only) time.
Millennium – Present: The Death of Shapira and Inconsistent Results In the season following the championship, the team finished a disappointing 7th. Two key players left (
Liron Basis to
Maccabi Tel Aviv,
Najwan Ghrayib to
Aston Villa), and their replacements couldn't lead the team to repeat the great achievement. The next season, the manager Guttman left, and his replacement Guy Levy brought 4 new foreign players:
Alin Minteuan, Oleg Yelshev, Michael Anicic and
Viktor Paço, who joined veteran Dimitry Ulianov. The team finished in the 3rd place after two victories in the Haifa
derby against Maccabi (3–0 and 3–1), and 3 victories over the current champion
Hapoel Tel Aviv (3–1 and 1–0 in
Tel Aviv and 2–0 at home). In the summer of 2001, the media reported that Shapira had decided to reduce his investment in the club significantly. The club's
budget was decreased, planned expenditures were canceled and key players were released. It was later discovered that Shapira's financial status had deteriorated. He had significant debts and his businesses were close to bankruptcy. Some of the club's
assets, including player cards, were mortgaged to a Dutch fishing company which Shapira owed money to. On Friday, December 14, 2001, Shapira committed suicide in his house in
Nigeria. After his suicide, the
court in
Haifa ruled that Hapoel Haifa would be administered by a temporary
liquidators. At the end of that season (2001–02), Hapoel Haifa was relegated to the second division. For nearly 3 years the club was managed by 3 liquidators, who managed to keep the team in the second division and simultaneously looking for potential purchasers to the club. Following its return to the top division in 2004, the club was bought by Yoav Katz, an Israeli businessman who resides in the United States. Hapoel Haifa played a single season (2004–05) in Israel's top league before again being relegated to the second division, where it stayed until the end of the
2008–09 season. After finishing first in the second division that year, Hapoel Haifa returned to the Israeli Premier league, and finished high enough in the standings to avoid relegation at the end of 2010.
Nitzan Shirazi replaced Shlomi Dora as manager prior to the 2010–11 season. The club remains very well known and respected in the local league, though no silverware is added to the trophy cabinet. Many foreign players who choose to sign for the club are later on successful in the higher ranks and leagues, due to the club's good connections, and the club is up until current days a good place for players to grow and promote from. In 2005–06 the club's
youth team won the youth league's championship, and established dominance as one of the best teams in Israel's youth league. ==European Appearances==