Aljaksandr Andryjeuski

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BelarusBelarus  Aljaksandr Andryjeuski Ice hockey player
Date of birth August 10, 1968
place of birth Minsk , Belarusian SSR
size 196 cm
Weight 96 kg
position striker
Shot hand Left
Draft
NHL Entry Draft 1991 , 10th lap, 220th position
Chicago Blackhawks
Career stations
until 1990 HK Dinamo Minsk
1990-1992 HK Dynamo Moscow
1992-1993 Indianapolis Ice
1993-1994 Kalamazoo Wings
1994 HK Dinamo Minsk
1994-1998 HPK Hämeenlinna
1998-1999 HC Bolzano
1999 Krefeld penguins
EHC Neuwied
1999-2001 Territory lions Oberhausen
2001-2003 Chimik Voskressensk
2003 Wolves Freiburg
2003-2004 HK Homel
2004-2005 HK Dinamo Minsk

Alyaksandr Leanidawitsch Andryjeuski ( Belarusian Аляксандр Леанідавіч Андрыеўскі , Russian Александр Леонидович Андриевский / Alexander Leonidovich Andrijewski * 10. August 1968 in Minsk , Byelorussian SSR ) is a former Belarusian ice hockey player and current - trainer , who during his career including a game for Chicago Blackhawks graduated in the National Hockey League , which selected him in the 1991 NHL Entry Draft in the tenth round at position 220. He also played in the German Ice Hockey League for the Krefeld Pinguine and Revierlöwen Oberhausen . He was also a Belarusian national team and played for the Belarusian national ice hockey team at the World Championships 1998-2001, the C-1995 World Cup, the B World Championships in 1996 and 1997 and at the Olympic Games in 1998 and of 2002.

Career as a player

Andryjeuski began his career in the 1984/1985 season with HK Dinamo Minsk in the Wysschaja Liga . He played for Minsk for five years before moving to HK Dynamo Moscow for two seasons within the league . 1991/1992 he also completed a game in National League A for HC Friborg-Gottéron , but went to North America for the following season , where he was used once for the Chicago Blackhawks in the National Hockey League. In the USA he played otherwise until the end of the 1993/1994 season exclusively in the IHL for the teams of the Indianapolis Ice and Kalamazoo Wings . In 1994/1995 he first played 10 games for his home club Dinamo Minsk in the Superliga , but then switched to the SM-liiga at HPK Hämeenlinna during the season , where he stayed until the end of the 1997/1998 season. From 1995 he also played in the Belarusian national team, whose squad he was part of until 2002.

In the 1998/1999 season he played in Italy for HC Bozen in Serie A , but also in the Alpine League and the European Hockey League , and in Germany 13 games for the Krefeld Pinguine in the DEL. In the following season he first played for EHC Neuwied in the 2nd Bundesliga . During the season, the EHC filed for bankruptcy and Andryjeuski ended the season with Revierlöwen Oberhausen in the DEL, for which he played until the end of the 2000/2001 season. Subsequently, he signed a two-year contract with Chimik Woskressensk (Wysschaya Liga), but moved back to Germany in the 2002/2003 season to end the season at EHC Freiburg in the 2nd Bundesliga. In 2003/2004 he played for HK Homel in the East European Hockey League and the Extraliga before ending his career in 2004/05, again playing for his home club Dinamo Minsk.

Career as a coach

Aljaksandr Andryjeuski began his coaching career at HK Dinamo Minsk in the 2006/07 season when he was still playing in Belarus. From 2008 he then held the same position at HK Homel .

From October 20, 2009 to April 2010, Andryjeuski was again the head coach of HK Dinamo Minsk.

From 2010 he was assistant coach at Dinamo, but was promoted to head coach in October 2012 after Kari Heikkilä was fired due to unsuccessfulness. During the 2013/14 season , at the end of November 2013, Andryjeuski was released from his job and replaced by his assistant coach Ľubomír Pokovič .

In 2014 he returned to HK Homel and looked after the team until the end of the 2014/15 season. He was then hired by Admiral Vladivostok as head coach and was responsible there until October 2017. In the 2018/19 season he was head coach at HK Sibir Novosibirsk .

Achievements and Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ RIA Novosti , KHL: Heikkila Fired as Dynamo Minsk Coach
  2. eurohockey.com, Aleksandr Andrievski is fired as head coach of Dinamo-Minsk , November 25, 2013, accessed on January 16, 2014