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UNVEILING THE
CLASS OF 2026

We are proud to announce the 2026 Class of Honorees officially being inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame later this summer.

THE 2025 CLASS

Robert Berland

Robert Berland

Judo

Robert “Bobby” Berland made history at the 1984 Olympic Games as the first American judoka to advance to the finals, earning a silver medal in the 86kg middleweight division. A two-time Olympian, he also competed in the 1988 Games. Prior to his Olympic success, Berland won bronze at the 1983 World Championships and secured a silver medal at the 1983 Pan American Games. A dominant force in U.S. judo, he claimed five national titles (1981, 1982, 1983, 1986, 1987).

A graduate of San Jose State University, Berland was a two-time national collegiate champion before making his mark on the international stage. After retiring from competition, he remained dedicated to the sport as both a coach and leader. He was a member of the coaching staff for the 2004 U.S. Olympic Judo Team in Athens and later served as a board member for the Chicago 2016 Olympic Bid effort, focused on bringing the Olympic Games to his hometown. His contributions to judo earned him a place in the USA Judo Hall of Fame.

Hanoch Budin

Swimming

Hanoch Budin won eight medals representing Israel at six Paralympics, 1984 through 2004, establishing two world records along the way. At the 1988 Games, he won five medals, including golds for 100-meter backstroke and 200-meter medley. He won two more Paralympic medals in 1992 and another in 1984. He also won gold in the 100-meter freestyle Swimming World Championships of 1994.

Andrés Cantor

Media

Argentine broadcaster Andres Cantor is famous for bellowing “Goooooooooooal” after a goal is scored in soccer matches. Popularized by Cantor, this elongated shout has been widely imitated by play-byplay soccer broadcasters. Since 1979, Cantor has won nine Emmy Awards broadcasting many World Cups and Olympic Games for Telemundo and Universo. In 1994, he was named Sports Personality of the Year by the American Sportscaster Association. In 2004, he won the Broadcasting & Cable/Multichannel News Lifetime Achievement Award in Hispanic Television. In 2020, the National Soccer Hall of Fame named Cantor its Colin Jose Media Award recipient for significant long-term contributions to soccer in the U.S.

Yves Dreyfus Z”L

Fencing

France’s Yves Dreyfus survived the Nazi occupation as a child and went on to win two Olympic fencing medals. A three-time Olympian, he won bronze medals at the 1956 and 1964 Games. He also won a gold medal at the Mediterranean Games in 1963 and four gold at the Maccabiah Games between 1961 and 1977. Dreyfus was given France’s National Order of Merit in 1967.

Stan Fischler

Media

Stan (“The Hockey Maven”) Fischler is a legendary hockey broadcaster, author, newspaperman and historian. While at Brooklyn College in the early 1950s, he began writing about sports for local newspapers. More than 70 years later, Fischler is still covering hockey in The Fischler Report. His writing has appeared in numerous major publications, including The Hockey News, New York Times, Toronto Star, The Sporting News and Sports Illustrated. As a broadcaster, Fischler has won seven Emmy Awards for his work on the MSG network. He has authored or co-authored nearly 100 books, from The Hockey Encyclopedia to Metroice: A Century of Hockey in Greater New York. In 2022, the New York Islanders hockey club re-named their press box in his honor. Fischler is a member of the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame and was presented with the NHL’s prestigious Lester Patrick Trophy for “outstanding service to hockey in the United States.”

Leah Goldstein

Cycling / Kickboxing

Born in Vancouver and raised in Israel, Leah Goldstein is an enduring multi-sport champion. In 1989, she became the women’s world Kickboxing champion. In 2021, she became the first woman to win the arduous, 3,000-mile cycling Race Across America. In the 32 years between those two championships, this indefatigable all-round athlete compiled a long list of accomplishments, including Duathlon champion of Israel in 1998 and Israeli national women’s road cycling champion of 2008 and 2009.

Gary “The Kid” Jacobs

Boxing

Arguably the greatest Jewish boxer of the past half century, Great Britain’s Gary Jacobs was an outstanding welterweight boxer of the 1980s and ‘90s, winning the European, Commonwealth and British championships, and fighting a legendary bout for the world title. In 1995, the World Boxing Council ranked Jacobs the world’s No. 1 welterweight contender. That year, he fought world champion Pernell Whitaker, widely regarded as the world’s best boxer, and lost the wild brawl on points. Jacobs was given the nickname “Kid” in tribute to Great Britain’s Jewish boxing greats Kid Berg and Kid Lewis (both inductees of the IJSHOF). He compiled a professional record of 45 wins, 8 losses. Jacobs was inducted into the Scottish Boxing Hall of Fame in 2011 and is currently a boxing coach.

Ralph Klein Z”L

Basketball

Ralph Klein was known as “Mr. Basketball” in Israel. He starred for Maccabi Tel Aviv, winning eight Super League national championships and six State Cups in the 1950s and ‘60s. As a member of Israel’s national basketball team, he played in the 1952 Summer Olympics and the 1954 World Cup. Named head coach of Maccabi Tel Aviv in 1969, his teams won 10 Israeli Super League championships, nine Israel State Cups, and the FIBA European Champions Cup (EuroLeague) championship of the 1976-77 season. As head coach of the national team, Klein won a silver medal at the 1979 EuroBasket. He was later head coach of the West German national team. Klein was awarded the Israel Prize for sport in 2006.

Abraham Kurland Z”L

WRESTLING

Abraham Kurland won a silver medal in lightweight Greco Roman wrestling at the 1932 Olympics. He was favored to win the gold medal in the 1936 Olympics, but refused to participate because the Olympics were in Nazi Germany. He won gold at the Maccabiah Games in 1932, gold at the European Championships in 1934 and silver at the 1935 European Championships. Kurland was Denmark’s national champion 12 times between 1932 and 1949.

Shahar Pe’er

Tennis

Israel’s Shahar Pe’er won five singles and three doubles titles on the World Tennis Association Tour. She reached her peak with a World No. 11 ranking in 2011. In doubles, she was ranked No. 14 in 2008. She represented Israel in two Olympic Games. Pe’er won the Junior Girls Australian Open when she was 16. In 2001, at age 14, she became the youngest player to win the Israel women’s tennis championship.

Hellen Plaschinski Farca de Finkler

Swimming

Hellen Plaschinski Farca de Finkler is a world-record holding Mexican freestyle swimmer. She was part of a round trip English Channel crossing from England to France that set a world record of 18 hours 59 minutes in 2007. Because of this result, the Mexican relay team was inducted in the book of the Guinness World records in 2008. In 2008, Hellen participated in a swimming relay race around the island of Manhattan in which she placed first. She also set meet records at the Central American and Caribbean Games and won two bronze medals at the 1979 Pan American Games. She won first place in 100-meter freestyle at Copa Latina, in Madrid, 1980, breaking a new meet record, earning her place in the Mexican Olympic team for the Moscow Olympics. Fastest latinoamerican swimmer in the world. Hellen represented Mexico in the 1980 Olympic Games qualifying to the final in the freestyle relay placing sixth. In 1980, Hellen was inducted to the Ft Lauderdale International Swimming Hall of Fame in Florida, her name is inscribed in a trophy called Cabeza de Palenque. She won three gold medals at the 1977 and 1981 Maccabiah Games, 2 in 100m freestyle, breaking two Maccabiah records and one in the 200m freestyle. Hellen also won one silver and one bronze in 100m breaststroke. She was honored with the National Sports Award by Mexican President Lopez Portillo in 1978. In 2019 during the opening ceremony of the Pan American Maccabiah Games in Mexico City, Hellen was the torch bearer and lit the Maccabiah flame.

Sarah Poewe

Swimming

Sarah Poewe is a former German-South African swimmer, born on March 3, 1983, in Cape Town, South Africa. Specializing in breaststroke, she competed in four Olympic Games (2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012), initially representing South Africa before switching to compete for Germany in 2002. One of the highlights of her career came at the 2004 Athens Olympics, where she won a bronze medal as part of Germany’s 4×100m medley relay team. In addition to her Olympic success, Poewe secured multiple podium finishes at the World and European Championships, excelling in both individual and relay events. She also achieved victories in FINA World Cup competitions and held national records in breaststroke for both Germany and South Africa. Her remarkable longevity and versatility cemented her status as one of the top breaststroke swimmers of her time. Her participation in the 2004 Athens Olympics, where she won a bronze medal in the 4×100m medley relay, was not only a personal achievement but also a symbolic milestone for Jewish representation in German sports.

Oren Smadja

Judo

Israel’s Oren Smadja won Olympic medals as a judoka athlete in 1992 (bronze) and a judoka coach in 2016 (Ori Sasson’s bronze). In 1995, Smadja won a silver medal at the World Championships. Smadja, of Tunisian Jewish descent, was 12 years old when he won a gold at the first Israel Judo Championship. He was named Israel’s sportsman of the year in 1995 and coach of the year in 2015 and 2016.

Amar’e Stoudemire

Basketball

As a member of the Phoenix Suns in 2003, Amare Stoudemire was National Basketball Association Rookie of the Year. He played in six NBA All-Star games and was named to All-NBA teams five times. (The first team once and second team four times.) Stoudemire averaged more than 20 points per game in seven NBA seasons. He was on the U.S. 2004 Olympic team that won a bronze medal. Stoudemire was on Hapoel Jerusalem’s championship team in 2017 and Maccabi Tel Aviv’s 2020 championship team. The Suns inducted Stoudemire into its Ring of Honor in 2024.

THE 2026 CLASS

Marv Albert

Media

Albert was referred to as “the voice of basketball”. From 1967 to 2004, he was the voice of the New York Knicks and was best known nationally for his work as the lead announcer for both the NBA on NBC and NBA games on TNT. In addition to basketball, he called a variety of other sports, such as American football, ice hockey, horse racing, boxing, and tennis including eight Super Bowls, nine NBA Finals, and seven Stanley Cup Finals. He also called the Wimbledon Tennis Championships and was a reporter for two World Series. He won 8 Emmy Awards and is in multiple Halls of Fame including the National Jewish Museum Sports Hall of Fame, the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame, and the Broadcasting Hall of Fame.

Jay Berger

Tennis

Berger reached a career-high Association of Tennis Professionals singles ranking of World No. 7 in 1990. An all-American at Clemson, Berger was named Tennis Magazine’s Junior Player of the Year in 1985. He turned pro in 1986 and quickly won ATP events in Buenos Aires and Sao Paulo. Berger defeated multiple International Tennis Hall of Famers/Grand Slam Champions including Pete Sampras, Jimmy Connors, Stefan Edberg and Boris Becker. In Davis Cup play, he represented the U.S. in 1988 and 1990. Knee injuries forced his retirement but he went on to coach the U.S. Olympic tennis team in 2012 and 2016.

Omri Casspi

Basketball

Casspi was the first Israeli to play in the NBA after being drafted in the first round of the NBA Draft as a small forward and power forward. As a rookie, Casspi was chosen to participate in the NBA All-Star Weekend Rookie Challenge. He played professionally for 15 years including 10 years in the NBA. Casspi played for the senior Israeli national team in international competition and was the team’s captain at the 2015 EuroBasket. Casspi was one of seven athletes to have been honored with participation in the torch lighting ceremony of the 2017 Maccabiah Games.

Carolina Duer

Boxing

Duer was the International Boxing Federation (IBF) bantamweight champion, the World Boxing Organization (WBO) bantamweight champion, and the WBO super flyweight champion. She is the eighth Argentine woman to hold a WBO boxing championship, and the first Jewish one. Duer began to announce boxing in 2014 on National Public Television.

Julian Edelman

American Football

Edelman was an American former professional football wide receiver and punt returner who played in the National Football League (NFL) for 12 seasons with the New England Patriots. Edelman became a primary offensive starter in 2013 and was a staple of the Patriots’ receiving corps until his retirement after the 2020 season. One of the NFL’s most productive postseason receivers, Edelman ranks third in postseason receiving yards and receptions and holds the Super Bowl records for punt returns and first-half receptions in a single game. A three-time Super Bowl winner, he was the receiving yards leader during his victories in Super Bowl XLIX, and Super Bowl LIII where Edelman was named the Super Bowl MVP, accounting for more than half his team’s receiving yards. In 2014, Edelman wore an Israeli-American flag pin on his hat during a game against the Denver Broncos at Gillette Stadium. He also voiced support for the victims of the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting: Edelman wore an Israeli flag hat following the Patriots’ victory over the Green Bay Packers on November 4, 2018 and wore a pair of customized cleats bearing the hashtag #strongerthanhate in a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers six weeks later. He was inducted into the New England Patriots Hall of Fame in 2025.

Robert Fein Z”L

Weightlifting

Fein was an Austrian Olympic Champion weightlifter, winning the gold medal in the lightweight class at the 1936 Summer Olympics. The following year, he won the silver medal at the 1937 World Weightlifting Championships and set his 23rd world record that year. One year later, he was barred from competing in weightlifting, because he was Jewish, and he never competed again.

Dezso Földes Z”L

Fencing

Foldes was an outstanding fencer who won Gold medals as a member of Hungary’s saber fencing team at the 1908 Summer Olympic Games and the 1912 Summer Olympic Games. Each of his Hungarian Olympic teammates (Jeno Fuchs, Oskar Gerde and Lajos Werner) have been enshrined into the IJSHOF. Foldes immigrated to the U.S. after the 1912 Olympic Games, settled in Cleveland, Ohio and established a hospital clinic for the poor.

Yuri Foreman

Boxing

Foreman was the World Boxing Association’s super welterweight world champion. He won national amateur titles in Israel before moving in 1999 to Brooklyn, where he won the New York Golden Gloves tournament. In 2004, he signed with Bob Arum’s Top Rank promotion company and quickly rose up through the professional welterweight rankings. On November 14, 2009, he won a 12-round decision over Daniel Santos to become the WBA’s world super welterweight title holder. He finished his professional career with 35 wins, four losses. Foreman was ordained as a rabbi in 2014.

Noemie Fox

Canoeing

Fox is an Australian slalom canoeist who won the gold medal at the 2024 Summer Olympic Games in the kayak cross, becoming the first-ever Olympic champion in that event. Fox’s 2024 Olympic victory meant that she and her sister Jessica (who was inducted into the IJSHOF in 2022) joined the exclusive club of siblings who have won individual gold medals at the same Olympics. In addition, she has won two world championships and came in second place once. Noemie’s Mother, Myriam Fox-Jerusalmi, was also inducted into the IJSHOF in 2018.

Lydia Hatuel-Czuckermann

Fencing

Since 1971, Lydia Hatuel Czuckermann has been a defining figure in Israeli fencing, combining elite athletic achievement with decades of leadership and service to the sport.

A member of Israel’s senior national team from 1978 and part of Olympic squads beginning in 1979, she met the Olympic qualification standard five times and competed in three Olympic Games: Los Angeles 1984, Barcelona 1992, and Atlanta 1996. At the 1996 Atlanta Games, she carried the Israeli flag at the Opening Ceremony, a moment of profound national pride. She was twice prevented from competing due to principled national decisions in 1980 and 1988.

Internationally, she ranked as high as 8th in the world, finished 8th at the 1991 World Championships, earned multiple top-eight World Cup finishes, and captured two bronze medals at “Super A” Grand Prix events in 1996. From 1996 to 1997, she was ranked among the top 16 fencers globally.
Nationally, she won the Israeli Senior Championship 16 consecutive times, an Israeli record recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records.
After overcoming a severe injury following the birth of her second son, she made an inspiring comeback, reclaiming the Israeli national title in 2004 and leading her team to fourth place at the European Senior Team Championships.

Beyond competition, she has served as Chair of the Israel Fencing Association, a member of the Executive Board of the Olympic Committee of Israel, and a founding member of the Olympic Athletes’ Committee. Her legacy reflects excellence, resilience, and lifelong leadership in Israeli sport.

Nancy Lieberman

Basketball

Nancy is a two-time Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer, BIG3 Head Coach, 2018 Champion, and two-time Coach of the Year. She is a two-time Olympian and silver medalist (1976), and the mom of T.J. Cline. Her coaching career has included the NBA, WNBA, NBA G League, and the BIG3, and at each step along the way she has broken barriers, elevated the profile of women in the game, and helped develop the current and next generation of basketball players. Under her leadership, Team Power won the BIG3 Championship in 2018, making her the first female coach to win a title in a men’s professional league. She helped the United States win medals at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal (silver medal), the 1979 World Championships in Seoul (gold medal), the 1975 and 1979 Pan American Games in Mexico (gold medal) and Puerto Rico (silver medal), and the gold medal in the 1979 Jones Cup in Taipei. After winning consecutive AIAW National Championships and one WNIT Championship at Old Dominion University, Nancy was a three-time All American and two-time national player of the year in collegiate basketball for the Monarchs. She was the first pick in the first-ever women’s pro league, the Women’s Basketball League (WBL), for the Dallas Diamonds in 1980. In 1985, the Diamonds won the championship in the WABA and Nancy was Player of the Year. She played for the Los Angeles Lakers in the Summer Pro League in 1981 for Pat Riley in preparation for her upcoming season with the Diamonds. In 1986 and 1987, Nancy joined the USBL, becoming the first woman to play in a men’s professional league, in 1986 with the Springfield Fame and in 1987 with the Long Island Knights. The Lieberman Award, presented by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, recognizes the top point guard in women’s NCAA Division I college basketball for their floor leadership.

Al Michaels

Media

Michaels began working on network sports television in 1971, He worked for nearly three decades with ABC Sports covering Major League Baseball as their lead announcer, college football, Monday Night Football, college basketball, the Indianapolis 500, ice hockey, track and field, horse racing (including the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, and Belmont Stakes), golf, boxing, figure skating, road cycling, and many events of the Olympic Games (including the Miracle on Ice at the 1980 Winter Olympics) as well as the Olympic trials. He also served as the studio host for the Stanley Cup Finals from 2000–2002. He won many awards including 5 Sports Emmy Awards, won the National Sportscaster of the Year Award 3 times and was voted by the ASA as one of the Top 50 Sportscasters of All Time. His Hall of Fames include the NSMA Hall of Fame, The Television Academy Hall of Fame, The Pete Rozelle Radio & Television Award – Pro Football Hall of Fame and the Ford C. Frick Award winner – Baseball Hall of Fame plus he has a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Bruce Pearl

Basketball

Pearl was an American college basketball coach who most recently served as the head coach of the Auburn Tigers men’s basketball team for 11 seasons. In 2025, Pearl was named Co-AP Coach of the Year (with Rick Pitino). Prior to Auburn, he served as the Head Coach at Tennessee, Milwaukee, and Southern Indiana. Pearl led Southern Indiana to a Division II national championship in 1995, during which he was named Division II Coach of the Year by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. In Division I, his teams won four conference championships, four conference tournament championships, qualified for eleven NCAA tournament appearances and two Final Four appearances. Pearl was the second-fastest NCAA coach to reach 300 career victories. Pearl was named Coach of the Year by Sporting News in 2006 and was awarded the Adolph Rupp Cup in 2008. He also served as the head coach for the Maccabi USA men’s basketball team that won the gold medal at the 2009 Maccabiah Games. Pearl was the first president of the Jewish Coaches Association. The Algemeiner named Pearl one of 100 people positively influencing Jewish life in 2022.

Morgan Pressel

Golf

Morgan Pressel is a major champion professional golfer who has been a prominent figure in the game since her early teens. At age 12, she became the youngest player ever to qualify for the U.S. Women’s Open, and at 18 she made history as the youngest LPGA major champion with her victory at the Kraft Nabisco Championship. She rose to a career high world ranking of No. 4 and represented the United States six times on the Solheim Cup team, later serving as an assistant captain in 2023 and 2024. Following her playing career, Pressel transitioned to broadcasting and is now a lead analyst for Golf Channel and NBC Sports. In 2025 she was named captain of the U.S. Team for the 2026 PING Junior Solheim Cup. Beyond golf, Pressel is deeply committed to philanthropy. Through the Morgan Pressel Foundation, she has raised significant funds and awareness for breast cancer research and patient support, honoring her late mother’s legacy and using her platform to make a lasting impact off the course.

Zipora Rubin-Rosenbaum

Paralympian

Rubin-Rosenbaum represented Israel at 7 Summer Paralympic Games and she won an astonishing 31 Paralympic medals including 15 Gold Medals. She competed in multiple events including track & field, swimming, table tennis and wheelchair basketball. Her first Paralympic Games were at the 1964 Summer Paralympics Games and her last was at the 1988 Summer Paralympic Games. She is the most decorated Israeli Paralympian in history.

Red Sarachek Z”L

Basketball

Sarachek was a basketball coach and athletic director at Yeshiva University in New York City from 1940 to 1969. He was also a mentor of legendary coaches such as Red Holzman (New York Knicks and IJSHOF Hall of Famer), Lou Carnesecca (St. John’s), and Jack Donohue (Holy Cross). Yeshiva, under Sarachek, has been called “the birthplace of modern basketball” due to his innovative ball-handling schemes. Sarachek designed and implemented motion offenses, trapping defenses, plays to beat zone defenses and creative in-bound plays. His schemes were admired and copied by coaches around the country. His story is featured in The First Basket, the first and most comprehensive documentary on the history of Jews and basketball. In 1948-1949, Saracheck coached two of the top professional teams in what was known as the Eastern League at the same time. Legend has it that the two teams met in the playoffs and caused a new ruling barring the practice. He has been inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, the New York City Basketball Hall of Fame, the New York City Hall of Fame and the Yeshiva University Hall of Fame.

Danny Schayes

Basketball

Danny Schayes was an American professional basketball player who was an Intercollegiate All-American and Academic All-American while playing for Syracuse University and played 18 seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA), from 1981 until 1999. He was selected in the first round of the 1981 NBA Draft with the 13th overall pick by the Utah Jazz and was the second center selected that year. At 6’11” and 235 pounds, he played both the center and power forward positions in the NBA and appeared in more than 1,200 NBA games during his career. Schayes is a three-time Maccabiah Games gold medalist, winning two as a player and one as a coach. He is the son of the late Dolph Schayes, who was selected for the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame (IJSHOF). Danny Schayes was inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, the Syracuse University Hall of Fame, and was named to the Syracuse University All-Century Basketball Team.

Diego Schwartzman

Tennis

Schwartzman reached a career-high Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) world ranking of No. 8 in 2020. In 2016, the Argentinian won his first ATP tournament, the Istanbul Open. He would go on to win another three ATP singles events. At 5 feet and 7 inches tall, he was known for his speed, tenacity and return of serve and led all ATP players in percentage of second-serve return points won in 2017 and 2019. He defeated multiple world top 10 players including Rafael Nadal, Taylor Fritz, Marin Cilic, and Alexander Zverev. Schwartzman represented Argentina in the 2015 Davis Cup and at the 2020 Olympic Games.

Doron Shaziri

Shooting

At the World Paralympic Championships, he became a World Champion winning Gold and Bronze Medals in 2006, and Bronze Medals at the 2010 & 2014 Games. Representing Israel, Shaziri won a total of 8 silver and bronze medals competing at the 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2012 Paralympic Games. He was selected to be a flag bearer at the 2012 Paralympics opening ceremony where he also won a silver medal. Shaziri lost his leg in 1987 when he was struck by a mine while working as an Israel Defense Forces recruit patrolling the Israeli-Lebanon border. In 1994, he established his own business constructing wheelchairs for injured veterans.

Andre Tippett

American Football

Tippett was a former professional football player who was a linebacker in the National Football League (NFL) for 11 seasons with the New England Patriots. A second-round pick in the 1982 NFL draft, Tippett was selected to five Pro Bowls and was named first-team All-Pro twice in his career. He currently serves as the executive director of Community Affairs for the New England Patriots. He was enshrined into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame and the College Football Hall of Fame. Lastly, he was selected to the Patriots Team of the Century in 2000.

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