Ronny Rosenthal Explained

Ronny Rosenthal
Birth Date:1963 10, df=yes
Birth Place:Haifa, Israel
Position:Forward, striker
Youthyears1:1974–1979
Youthclubs1:Maccabi Haifa
Years1:1979–1986
Years2:1986–1988
Years3:1988–1990
Years4:1990
Years5:1990–1994
Years6:1994–1997
Years7:1997–1999
Clubs3:Standard Liège
Clubs4:Liverpool (loan)
Clubs7:Watford
Caps1:137
Caps2:43
Caps3:44
Caps4:8
Caps5:66
Caps6:88
Caps7:30
Totalcaps:416
Goals1:42
Goals2:15
Goals3:20
Goals4:7
Goals5:14
Goals6:4
Goals7:8
Totalgoals:110
Nationalyears1:1983–1997
Nationalteam1:Israel
Nationalcaps1:60
Nationalgoals1:11
Pcupdate:01:26, 20 November 2007 (UTC)

Ronny Rosenthal (Hebrew: רוני רוזנטל; born 4 October 1963), nicknamed "Rocket Ronny",[1] is an Israeli former footballer who played as a forward.

After starting his career in his birth city with Maccabi Haifa, Rosenthal went on to play in Belgium with Club Brugge and Standard Liège. He moved to Liverpool in 1990 for a fee of £1.1 million, becoming the first non-UK player to move to an English club for more than £1 million. After four years at Liverpool, Rosenthal finished his career with Tottenham Hotspur and Watford.

Between 1983 and 1997 he made 60 appearances for the Israel national team, scoring 11 goals.

Early and personal life

Rosenthal was born in Haifa, Israel. [2] [3] His father, who was born in Bucharest, Romania and is of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, immigrated to Israel later on.[4] [5] His mother, born in Morocco to a Moroccan Jewish family, also immigrated to Israel.[6] His brother Lior Rosenthal is also a former footballer who played for Maccabi Haifa the Israel national team.

Rosenthal married a Belgian, Nancy, who converted to Judaism. Their two sons, Dean Rosenthal—who was Bar Mitzvah in Israel—and Tom Rosenthal, were born in England. Dean is director of a sporting management company; while Tom, formerly on the books of Queens Park Rangers as a midfielder, formerly played for the Dutch team FC Dordrecht, and has been capped by Belgium at the under-18 and U19 levels—where he scored three goals—and has switched to Israel and was named to its U21 national team in 2018 for the Euro 2019 qualifiers against Germany and Norway.[7] [8]

Rosenthal now resides in London, and has worked as a football agent and consultant. His nephew is Israeli international footballer Denny Gropper.[9]

On 11 May 2019, Rosenthal and his family were subjected to a "terrifying ordeal", when masked machetes-holding robbers, raided his home in Cricklewood, England.[10]

Club career

He was left-footed, and began his playing career with Maccabi Haifa in the city in which he was born in his native Israel, winning two Israeli league titles.[11] Rosenthal left his homeland to sign for Belgian side Club Brugge KV in 1988. He scored 15 goals in two seasons, and won the Belgian league title one season.

He then joined English side Liverpool on loan in March 1990, as manager Kenny Dalglish looked to increase his options for the forward positions during Liverpool's league title run-in. He scored seven goals in eight Football League First Division games, including a hat-trick against Charlton Athletic, which helped Liverpool secure their third league title in five seasons. His move to Anfield was then made permanent for a fee of £1 million - double the fee which had been quoted before the loan deal was agreed.[12] At Anfield, he became a cult hero.[13]

During the 1990–91 season, Rosenthal faced continued fierce competition for a place in the first team from Liverpool's established strikers Ian Rush and Peter Beardsley, and then from mid-season signing David Speedie. He played 16 times in the league, and scored five goals as Liverpool finished second in the league. In 1991–92, Rosenthal played 20 times in the league, but it was a frustrating league campaign for both player and club, as the Reds finished sixth in the league and Rosenthal only found the net three times. Liverpool did win the FA Cup that season, but Rosenthal was not selected for the final. Despite the pre-season departure of both Speedie and Beardsley, Rosenthal was now faced with competition for a place from new signing Dean Saunders. 1992–93 was slightly better, as Rosenthal played 27 games in the new Premier League, and scored six goals, but it was another frustrating season for Liverpool, who finished sixth in the league once again and spent most of the season occupying even lower positions. Saunders had been sold to Aston Villa early in the season, while new signing Paul Stewart proved to be a major disappointment.[14] A memorable occasion during that first Premier League season came when Rosenthal hit the crossbar with a shot on an open goal in a league match against Aston Villa.[15]

With the arrival of Nigel Clough in the summer of 1993, and the breakthrough of Robbie Fowler soon after, Rosenthal played just three league games for Liverpool in 1993–94 and was sold to Tottenham Hotspur in January 1994. Rosenthal scored on his debut in February 1994, in a home defeat to Sheffield Wednesday. He became a regular member of the first team at White Hart Lane, playing 15 league games and scoring twice before the season's end. Despite Teddy Sheringham overcoming injury problems, and the close season signing of Jürgen Klinsmann, Rosenthal still managed to appear in 20 Premier League games in 1994–95, though he failed to score. His best form came in the FA Cup, in which he scored five goals in Tottenham's run to the semi-final. This included a hat-trick in a 6–2 fifth round replay win at Southampton. Klinsmann was then sold to Bayern Munich and Spurs signed Chris Armstrong, but Rosenthal still played in all but five of Tottenham's 38 Premier League games in 1995–96, mostly as a substitute, but only scored one goal.

1996–97 brought a similar story for player and club. For the third consecutive season, Spurs fell short of a UEFA Cup place, while Rosenthal was on the scoresheet only once in the league, and this time was restricted to 20 league appearances. In more than three years in North London, Rosenthal had appeared in 88 league games (55 of them starts) but scored just four goals.[16] He then dropped down two divisions to sign for Watford, and played 30 games over the next seasons and scored eight goals as Watford won back-to-back promotions to reach the FA Premier League. He then retired from playing at the age of 35.[17]

International career

Rosenthal was also a regular member of the Israel national team for most of his career. He won his first senior cap in 1983, and by the time his international career drew to a close in 1997, he had been capped 60 times and scored 11 goals.[18]

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[19]
ClubSeasonLeagueNational cupLeague cupContinentalOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Maccabi Haifa1980–81Liga Artzit274274
1981–82Liga Leumit247247
1983–84Liga Leumit236236
1984–85Liga Leumit30123012
1985–86Liga Leumit33133313
Total1374213742
Club Brugge1986–87Belgian First Division2811223013
1987–88Belgian First Division15480234
Total43151025317
Standard Liège1988–89Belgian First Division30143014
1989–90Belgian First Division146146
Total44204420
Liverpool (loan)1989–90First Division8787
Liverpool1990–91First Division16510175
1991–92First Division2033010243
1992–93Premier League276203010336
1993–94Premier League300030
Total74215040208521
Tottenham Hotspur1993–94Premier League152152
1994–95Premier League2004410254
1995–96Premier League3315221404
1996–97Premier League201201
Total884963110011
Watford1997–98Second Division25841299
1998–99First Division50102080
Total3081061379
Career total4161101569214220456120

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Team That Dared To Do: Tottenham Hotspur 1994/5 - Gerry Francis, Chris Slegg. 9781785313561. Francis. Gerry. Slegg. Chris. 16 September 2017. Pitch Publishing (Brighton) Limited .
  2. News: Ronnie Rosenthal in Brief . The Jewish Chronicle . 16 March 2007 . PressReader.
  3. Book: Wechsler, Bob. Day by Day in Jewish Sports History. 10 September 2008. KTAV Publishing House, Inc.. 9780881259698. Google Books.
  4. Web site: Povestea necunoscută a unui campion cu Liverpool: "Tata e născut în București! Încă urmărește la TV tot ce e legat de România". Gazeta Sporturilor. ro.
  5. Web site: דני גרופר, "השחקן הרומני האנונימי שזכה באליפות בולגריה" - וואלה! ספורט . 19 April 2022 .
  6. Web site: לונדון כן מחכה לרוזנטל . 6 October 2002 .
  7. News: Simon Burnton . Small talk: Ronnie Rosenthal . guardian.co.uk . 16 November 2007. 27 January 2011 . London.
  8. https://www.thejc.com/sport/football/rosenthal-israel-u21-1.461301 "Rosenthal called up by Israel U21s; English-born Tom Rosenthal has been named in Israel’s under-21 squad for the Euro 2019 qualifiers against Germany and Norway."
  9. News: 16 שחקנים עשו הכל כדי שצמרת הכדורגל הישראלי תבחין בהם. העונה הם הצליחו . הארץ .
  10. Web site: Ex-Tottenham and Liverpool star attacked by machete gang in raid at home. Matt. Maltby. 30 July 2019. mirror.
  11. Web site: Newsview. 10 September 1984. L.J. Tamman. Google Books.
  12. Book: From a Field to Anfield: A Footballer's Journey from Grassroots to the Top ... - Nick Tanner, Steve Cotton. 9781785313516. Tanner. Nick. Cotton. Steve. 15 August 2017.
  13. Web site: Ronny Rosenthal on THAT miss: 'I'm glad it happened!'. Paul. Gorst. 2 December 2016. Liverpool Echo.
  14. Web site: Ronny ROSENTHAL - League appearances. - Liverpool FC. Sporting Heroes.
  15. Web site: Liverpool career stats for Ronny Rosenthal - LFChistory - Stats galore for Liverpool FC!. www.lfchistory.net.
  16. Book: Cowlin, Chris. Another 101 Interesting Facts About Spurs: Learn About the Boys From The Lane. 23 October 2014. Andrews UK Limited. 9781910295564. Google Books.
  17. Web site: Ronny ROSENTHAL - League appearances. - Tottenham Hotspur FC. Sporting Heroes.
  18. Book: Cowlin, Chris. The Liverpool Quiz Book. 3 February 2012. Andrews UK Limited. 9781908752123. Google Books.
  19. Web site: Ronny Rosenthal » Club matches . worldfootball.net . 5 May 2023.