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Sport

We’re football mad, so where are our players?

The third round of the FA Cup takes place this weekend. It’s a showpiece of the English game. Plenty of British Jews will be watching but none will be playing for the top clubs. Why not?

December 30, 2008 16:57
No British Jew has played top flight football since Barry Silkman played 29 years ago

By

Craig Silver

4 min read

Jews love football. Hundreds of young Jewish men turn out every week to play the game, most of them in the Maccabi League in London and Manchester, but some for non-Jewish amateur teams in other leagues. The owners of many of the country’s biggest clubs are Jewish. Some of the top football writers come from Jewish backgrounds. Even the chairman of the Football Association, Lord Triesman, is a Jew.

In fact, virtually the only area of the sport in which Jews do not play a significant role is as professional players.

In the past, it could be argued that the rewards available to footballers paled in comparison with the money that could be earned in the professions Jewish men tend to choose — law, accountancy, medicine, finance.

That is certainly not the case any more, with contracts worth millions available to the best players. Yet we are still waiting for the first British Jew to make his debut in the Premier League. Why?