HC CSKA Moscow
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| CSKA Moscow | |
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| Founded | 1946 |
| Home ice | CSKA Universal Sports Hall |
| Based in | Moscow, Russia |
| Colours | Red, white, blue |
| League | Continental Hockey League |
| Head coach | Vyacheslav Bykov |
| Russian/Soviet Championships won | 32 (1948, 1949, 1950, 1955, 1956, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989) |
| European Cups won | 20 (1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990) |
| Spengler Cups won | 1 (1991) |
| Pajulahti Cups won | 1 (2005) |
| Official website | http://www.cska-hockey.ru |
HC CSKA Moscow (Central Sports Army Hockey Club Moscow, Russian: ХК ЦСКА Москва) is a Russian ice hockey club. It is referred to as the "Red Army Team" for its past affiliation with the Soviet Army, popularly known as the Red Army.
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[edit] History
[edit] A Russian hockey powerhouse
CSKA is one of the most successful teams in the history of professional sports. They won 32 Soviet championships during the Soviet League's 46-year existence, including all but six from 1955 to 1989 and 13 in a row from 1977 to 1989. By comparison, no NHL team has ever won more than five Stanley Cups in a row. They were almost as dominant in the European Cup. They won all but two titles from 1969 to 1990, including 12 in a row from 1978 to 1990. The team's first coach was Anatoli Tarasov, who would later become famous as the coach of the Soviet national team. Tarasov coached the Red Army Team, either alone or with co-coaches, for most of the time from 1946 to 1975. The team's greatest run came under Viktor Tikhonov, who was coach from 1977 to 1996--serving for most of that time as coach of the national team.
The Red Army Team was able to pull off such a long run of dominance because during the Soviet era, the entire CSKA organization was a functioning division of the Red Army. Taking full advantage of the fact that all able-bodied Soviet males had to serve in the military, it was literally able to draft the best young hockey players in the Soviet Union onto the team. There was a substantial overlap between the rosters of the Red Army Team and the Soviet national team, which was one factor behind the Soviets' near-absolute dominance of international hockey from the 1950s through the early 1990s. By the late 1980s, however, the long run of Red Army dominance caused a significant dropoff in attendance throughout the league.[1]
Not surprisingly, discipline was quite strict, especially under Tikhonov. His players practiced for as many as 11 months a year, and were confined to barracks throughout that time even if they were married. However, he mellowed somewhat after the collapse of the Soviet Union.[1]
CSKA has remained one of the strongest clubs in Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union, though it has yet to win a championship. Off the ice, the massive exodus of Russian players to the NHL hit CSKA particularly hard, in part because, as mentioned above, nearly all of the country's best players were on the roster. For a time in the late 1990s and early 2000s, it was briefly unofficially known as "the Russian Penguins" after the Pittsburgh Penguins bought an interest in the team.[1]
One of the most feared lines in hockey history was the KLM Line of the 1980s. The name came from the last names of the three players, Vladimir Krutov, Igor Larionov, and Sergei Makarov. Together with defensemen Viacheslav Fetisov and Alexei Kasatonov, they were known as the Green Unit because they wore green jerseys in practice. The five-man unit formed a dominant force in European hockey throughout the decade. All five players would be permitted to come to the NHL in 1989, with mixed results. Krutov had the shortest NHL career, lasting only one season in Vancouver; Makarov (who won the Calder Trophy in 1990) and Kasatonov were out of the NHL by 1997; Fetisov and Larionov won the Stanley Cup twice together with Detroit before Fetisov retired in 1998; Larionov would win a third Cup with Detroit in 2002, before retiring from New Jersey in 2004.
[edit] CSKA and the NHL
CSKA played 36 games against NHL teams from 1975 to 1991 and finished with a record of 26 wins, 8 losses, and 2 ties. 34 of these games were played in Super Series, including a tour of North America in 1975/1976. On New Year's Eve 1975, CSKA played the Montreal Canadiens. The game ended with a 3-3 draw, but was widely hailed as one of the greatest games ever played.
Another memorable game was played on January 11, 1976 against the Philadelphia Flyers, who at the time were the defending Stanley Cup Champions. The game was notable for an incident where, after an extremely hard body check delivered by Philadelphia's Ed Van Impe, the CSKA's top player, Valery Kharlamov, was left prone on the ice for a minute. CSKA coach Konstantin Loktev pulled his team off the ice in protest that no penalty was called. They were told by NHL president Clarence Campbell to return to the ice and finish the game, which was being broadcast to an international audience, or the Soviet Hockey Federation would not get paid the fee that they were entitled to. They eventually complied and eventually lost that game 4-1.
CSKA Moscow alumni have made a large impact on the NHL; perhaps the largest impact came with the Detroit Red Wings of the mid-1990s. Sergei Fedorov, Vladimir Konstantinov, and Vyacheslav Kozlov had established themselves as key members of the Wings when they were joined by Fetisov and Larionov, forming the Russian Five. These five players would play an integral role in the Wings' consecutive Stanley Cup championships in 1997 and 1998. Dmitri Mironov joined the 1998 squad, following Konstantinov's career-ending injury on 13 June 1997; since Konstantinov was kept on the roster despite his injury, the 1998 squad marks the largest contingent of CSKA veterans (six) to win the Stanley Cup.
[edit] CSKA players - champions of USSR 1989
Players
- Sergei Makarov
- Vladimir Krutov
- Vyacheslav Bykov
- Andrei Khomutov
- Valeri Kamensky
- Igor Larionov
- Pavel Bure
- Aleksandr Mogilny
- Aleksei Kasatonov
- Vyacheslav Fetisov
- Igor Vyazmikin
- Sergei Fedorov
- Evgeny Davydov
- Igor Chibirev
- Vladimir Konstantinov
- Aleksei Gusarov
- Vladimir Malakhov
- Igor Kravchuk
- Sergei Starikov
- Pavel Kostichkin
- Valeri Zelepukin
- Sergei Zubov
- Igor Malykhin
- Alik Gareev
- Igor Ivanov
- Andrei Kovalenko
- Aleksandr Zybin
- Egor Bashkatov
- Denis Vinokurov
- Boris Mironov
- Andrei Skabelka
Goalies
- Aleksei Ivashkin
- Maksim Mikhailovsky
- Evgeny Belosheikin
- Leonid Gerasimov
- Konstantin Bakhutashvily
[edit] Pajulahti cup winners 2005
- Sergei Anshakov - 2 goals
- Sergei Mozyakin - 2 goals
- David Nemirovski - 4 goals
- Denis Parshin - 2 goals
- Andrei Nikitenko - 1 goal
- Vadim Khomitsky - 1 goal
- Dmitry Upper - 1 goal
- Dmitry Yerofeev
- Peteris Skudra (g)
- Sergei Ogorodnikov
- Anton Belov
- Alexandr Fomichev (g)
- Maxim Yakutsenya
- Martin Strbak
- Nikolay Lemtyugov
- Kirill Lyamin
- Sergei Krivokrasov
- Sergei Borisov (g)
[edit] Notable players
- Helmuts Balderis
- Sergei Brylin
- Pavel Bure
- Valeri Bure
- Vyacheslav Bykov
- Sergei Fedorov
- Viacheslav Fetisov
- Alexander Frolov
- Alexei Gusarov
- Valeri Kamensky
- Alexei Kasatonov
- Nikolai Khabibulin
- Valery Kharlamov
- Andrei Khomutov
- Vladimir Konstantinov
- Andrei Kovalenko
- Vyacheslav Kozlov
- Igor Kravchuk
- Vladimir Krutov
- Igor Larionov
- Vladimir Malakhov
- Sergei Makarov
- Boris Mikhailov
- Boris Mironov
- Dmitri Mironov
- Alexander Mogilny
- Vladimir Petrov
- Alexander Ragulin
- Vladislav Tretiak
- Gennadiy Tsygankov
- Vladimir Tsyplakov
- Peteris Skudra
- Nikolai Zherdev
- Sergei Zubov
[edit] CSKA against NHL clubs
| Season | Home team | Score | Away team |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1975–1976 | New York Rangers | 3 – 7 | CSKA |
| Montreal Canadiens | 3 – 3 | CSKA | |
| Boston Bruins | 2 – 5 | CSKA | |
| Philadelphia Flyers | 4 – 1 | CSKA | |
| 1979–1980 | CSKA | 5 – 2 | New York Rangers |
| CSKA | 3 – 2 | New York Islanders | |
| CSKA | 2 – 4 | Montreal Canadiens | |
| CSKA | 1 – 6 | Buffalo Sabres | |
| CSKA | 6 – 4 | Quebec Nordiques | |
| 1985–1986 | CSKA | 5 – 2 | Los Angeles Kings |
| CSKA | 6 – 3 | Edmonton Oilers | |
| CSKA | 1 – 5 | Quebec Nordiques | |
| CSKA | 6 – 1 | Montreal Canadiens | |
| CSKA | 4 – 2 | St. Louis Blues | |
| CSKA | 4 – 3 | Minnesota North Stars |
[edit] Trivia
CSKA fan-given name is "koni" (Russian for "horses").[1]


