JERUSALEM Sept 4 (Reuters) - UEFA confirmed on Tuesday that Maccabi Haifa will have to play their home Champions League matches in Cyprus because of security concerns in the Middle East.
Haifa, the first Israeli club to reach the group stages of
the competition, had held out a slim hope of seeing the decision
changed but UEFA deemed Israel too dangerous for visiting
European teams.
The three matches against Olympiakos on September 24, Bayer
Leverkusen on October 1 and Manchester United on October 29 will
all be played in Nicosia.
Thousands of Haifa fans are expected to make the short
journey -- Cyprus is about a 40-minute flight from Israel -- for
the matches.
INDIVIDUAL INVITATIONS
Although the club had made a last-ditch effort by sending
out individual invitations to their group F opponents to ignore
the ban, Haifa had known that there was no chance of such an
eventuality.
'From the outset we knew that the chances of us being able
to host the games in Israel were very slim, and we were not
surprised,' Itamar Chizik, the club's general manager said on
Tuesday.
'We have already begun to make preparations to play in
Nicosia.'
The matches will be held at Nicosia's 25,000-seat GSP
Stadium which has already hosted Israeli teams due to the
security restrictions imposed by UEFA last season.
Last March Hapoel Tel Aviv hosted AC Milan in the UEFA Cup
quarter-final first leg there and Haifa themselves opened this
season's Champions League qualifying campaign in the second
round with a tie against Belshina Bobruisk of Belarus.
Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv, the two teams
involved in the UEFA Cup are also barred from hosting their
matches in Israel, they have opted to play in the Bulgarian
capital, Sofia.
Haifa are preparing to make their debut in the Champions
League on Septemeber 18 against United at Old Trafford.
It is a much-anticipated encounter for Israeli fans, many of
whom will have split loyalties, as they also support the English
giants.
Media reports in Israel on Tuesday say that as many as 5,000
fans will travel to the match to witness what is being billed
locally as a great night for Israeli sport, regardless of the
result.