Alexander Viktorovich Sybin

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RussiaRussia  Alexander Sybin Ice hockey player
Date of birth June 10, 1960
place of birth Moscow , Russian SFSR , Soviet Union
size 178 cm
Weight 96 kg
position Left wing
Shot hand Left
Career stations
1979-1988 CSKA Moscow
1979-1980 SKA MWO Kalinin
1988-1990 Yaroslavl torpedo
1990-1991 Vienna Ice Skating Club
1991-1992 HC Sierre
EHC Essen-West
1992-1993 SKA Saint Petersburg
1993-1994 HC Courmaosta
1994-1996 Yaroslavl torpedo
1996-1998 SKA Saint Petersburg
1998-2000 HK CSKA Moscow

Alexander Wiktorowitsch Sybin ( Russian Александр Викторович Зыбин ; born June 10, 1960 in Moscow , Russian SFSR ) is a former Russian ice hockey player and current coach who has been a coach of the HK Dynamo Saint Petersburg since 2013 in the Molodjoschnaja Chokkeinaja hockey league, respectively listened to.

Career

Success with the CSKA

Alexander Sybin began his career in the sports school of CSKA Moscow and made his debut in March 1979 in the top division of the USSR, the Vysschaya League , against tractor Chelyabinsk . From the 1979/80 season he was a permanent member of the CSKA squad and won the Soviet championship and the European ice hockey cup in the following years. In 1980 he was part of the Soviet national junior team , which won the gold medal at the World Cup.

From 1980 he played at CSKA with Gennadi Kurdin in a row, first with Vladimir Petrov as a center forward and later with center Viktor Schluktow . Then he played for some time with Igor Larionov and Sergei Makarow in a storm line, replacing Vladimir Krutov , who was out due to an injury. Sybin asked head coach Viktor Tichonow after some time, however, to be used in another line of attack and was placed next to Mikhail Vasilyev and Alexander Gerasimow . During the 1980/81 season he was one of the candidates who should be included in the Soviet national team, but injured his knee and received no nomination.

In April 1988, a dispute began between Sybin and Tikhonov, which ultimately led to the move to Torpedo Yaroslavl after he had been banned from switching to a Moscow rival. A few days after his arrival in Yaroslavl, his longtime CSKA strike partner Mikhail Wassiljew, who had also left CSKA in the dispute, joined them. Together with Igor Maslennikow , the two formed a dangerous attack formation, which was characterized by a high point performance in the 1989/90 season , which was after the CSKA troika Bykow - Chomutow - Kamenski in second place in this special point rating.

In Western Europe and Russia

In 1990 he followed the contract offer of the head coach of the Vienna EV , Valentin Gurejew , and took third place with the club in the playoffs.

The 1991/92 season began Sybin at the Swiss HC Sierre , where his strike partner Yevgeny Shastin was. In the middle of the season he was loaned from the German club EHC Essen-West , with whom he was able to stay in the 2nd Bundesliga. At the end of the season, the HC Sierre did not renew the contract with Sybin, so he returned to Moscow. He then received an offer from SKA Saint Petersburg , where he became team captain under head coach Boris Mikhailov . At the same time, Mikhailov also coached the Russian national team, but Sybin was not included, although he was the SKA's second top scorer. With the SKA Sybin reached the play-off semi-finals for the MHL Cup , in which the SKA failed at the eventual winner HK Lada Tolyatti .

In the 1993/94 season Sybin played in the Italian Serie A and the multinational Alpine league for HC Courmaosta , among others with Alexander Barkow , Alexei Tkachuk and Sergei Jelakow . He then returned to Russia and played again for Torpedo Yaroslavl until 1996. Two more years at SKA followed before he let his career end between 1998 and 2000 at ZSKA.

Sybin played neither for the Russian nor the Soviet national team in the course of his career. Instead, he was in the Soviet national B team and a perspective squad for the Olympics . In the highest leagues of the USSR, respectively Russia and the CIS, Sybin completed over 500 games in which he scored more than 140 goals. In the European Cup he scored a total of 26 goals.

As a trainer

RussiaRussia  Alexander Sybin
Coaching stations
2000 Kristall Saratov (Assistant Trainer)
2001 Crystal Saratov
2001-2004 Salawat Yulayev Ufa (assistant coach)
2004-2005 Sibir Novosibirsk (assistant coach)
2007-2008 Captain Stupino
2013-2014 Dynamo St. Petersburg (MHL)
since 2016 Dynamo St. Petersburg (women)
2017-2018 U18 national team Russia

After the end of his career, Alexander Sybin worked as assistant coach to Sergei Nikolajew at Kristall Saratow before he was promoted to head coach in January 2001 due to an illness from Nikolayev. He then became assistant coach at Salawat Yulayev Ufa , again under Nikolayev, and was employed there until the end of the 2002/03 season. His next stop was HK Sibir Novosibirsk together with Nikolajew in the 2004/05 season.

In the 2007/08 season he was in charge of the second division team Kapitan Stupino as head coach, then as coach for player development in the youth division of SKA Saint Petersburg. From 2009 he was the junior coach of the Olympic Sports School , which was based in the Balaschicha Arena .

From April 3, 2013 to September 24, 2014 Sybin worked as the head coach of the youth team of HK Dynamo Saint Petersburg , which played in the Molodjoschnaja Chokkeinaja Liga (MHL). From July 1, 2015 Sybin was a coach for player development at the MHK Dynamo Saint Petersburg and from May 11, 2016 in the same position with the professional team of the club, which took part in the Wysschaja Hockey League . Since July 14, 2016, he has headed the women's team at Dynamo Saint Petersburg, which plays in the Shenskaya hockey league , and with it achieved third place in the championship in 2017 and 2018. In the 2017/18 season, he also worked as the head coach of the U18 national team of Russia and took part with them in the 2018 U18 Junior Ice Hockey World Championship , in which the national team took sixth place.

Achievements and Awards

  • 1980: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow
  • 1980: Gold medal at the U20 World Junior Championship
  • 1981: European Cup win with CSKA Moscow
  • 1981: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow
  • 1982: European Cup win with CSKA Moscow
  • 1982: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow
  • 1983: European Cup win with CSKA Moscow
  • 1983: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow
  • 1984: European Cup win with CSKA Moscow
  • 1984: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow
  • 1985: European Cup win with CSKA Moscow
  • 1985: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow
  • 1986: European Cup win with CSKA Moscow
  • 1986: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow
  • 1987: European Cup win with CSKA Moscow
  • 1987: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow
  • 1988: European Cup win with CSKA Moscow
  • 1988: Soviet champion with CSKA Moscow

Career statistics

( Legend for player statistics: Sp or GP = games played; T or G = goals scored; V or A = assists scored ; Pkt or Pts = scorer points scored ; SM or PIM = penalty minutes received ; +/− = plus / minus balance; PP = overpaid goals scored ; SH = underpaid goals scored ; GW = winning goals scored; 1  play-downs / relegation )

Club competitions

season team league Sp T V Pt SM
1978/79 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 1 0 1 1 0
1979/80 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 18th 3 7th 10 6th
1979/80 SKA MWO Kalinin Wtoraja League 18th
1980/81 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 27 9 5 14th 20th
1981/82 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 38 7th 11 18th 10
1982/83 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 39 14th 9 23 14th
1983/84 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 41 17th 4th 21st 6th
1984/85 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 33 11 7th 18th 4th
1985/86 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 22nd 2 3 5 2
1986/87 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 26th 4th 6th 10 12
1987/88 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 16 8th 3 11 0
1988/89 CSKA Moscow Vysschaya League 3 0 0 0 0
1988/89 Yaroslavl torpedo Vysschaya League 42 17th 25th 42 8th
1989/90 Yaroslavl torpedo Vysschaya League 47 15th 24 39 4th
1990/91 Viennese EV OIL 39 26th 30th 56 16
1991/92 HC Sierre NLB 18th 14th 16 30th 8th
1991/92 EHC Essen-West 2nd Bundesliga 22nd 28 19th 47 16
1992/93 SKA Saint Petersburg MHL 48 15th 17th 32 14th
1992/93 SKA Saint Petersburg II OPR 1 0 0 0 0
1993/94 HC Courmaosta Alpine League 9 14th 23
1993/94 HC Courmaosta Series A 10 9 6th 15th 6th
1994/95 Yaroslavl torpedo MHL 46 9 28 37 14th
1995/96 Yaroslavl torpedo MHL 51 10 14th 24 12
1995/96 Yaroslavl II torpedo Vysschaya League 3 0 2 2 0
1996/97 SKA Saint Petersburg Super league 36 7th 9 16 2
1997/98 SKA Saint Petersburg Super league 39 3 11 14th 14th
1998/99 CSKA Moscow Super league 42 3 9 12 6th
1999/00 CSKA Moscow Super league 17th 0 2 2 4th
1999/00 CSKA Moscow II Vysschaya League 2 2 2 4th 0

International

year team event Sp T V Pt SM
1980 Soviet Union U20 World Cup 5 1 1 2 2

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Александр Зыбин: От рыцарского наш хоккей перешел к битвам гладиаторов ( Memento from May 12, 2012 in the Internet Archive ), June 6, 2010, Rodna Gasetaja
  2. ЗЫБИН Александр Викторов. In: infosport.ru. Retrieved February 15, 2019 (Russian).
  3. ^ New coach for Russian U18. In: webarchive.iihf.com. June 12, 2017, accessed February 15, 2019 .