Ilya Petrovich Vorobyov

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Flag of Russia and Germany.svg  Ilya Vorobyov Ice hockey player
Date of birth March 16, 1975
place of birth Riga , Latvian SSR
size 183 cm
Weight 88 kg
position wing
Shot hand Right
Career stations
1993-1999 Frankfurt Lions
1999-2001 Krefeld penguins
2001-2003 Adler Mannheim
2003-2005 HK Lada Tolyatti
2005-2006 HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk
2006-2007 Chimik Moskovskaya Oblast
2007-2010 Frankfurt Lions

Ilja Petrowitsch Vorobjow ( Russian Илья Петрович Воробьёв , French transcription Ilia Vorobiev ; born March 16, 1975 in Riga , Latvian SSR ) is a former German - Russian ice hockey player who worked for the Frankfurt Lions , Krefeld, among others, from 1993 to 2010 Pinguine and Adler Mannheim has played in the German Ice Hockey League . Vorobyov has been working as an ice hockey trainer and official since the end of his career .

Career

As a player

The 1.83 m tall striker began his professional career at ESC Frankfurt , for whose DEL team, the Frankfurt Lions , he was still on the ice after the new highest German professional game class was founded in 1994 . In 1999 Vorobjow switched to the Krefeld Penguins , for which he was active for two seasons. For the 2001/02 season , Vorobyov had initially signed a contract with Berlin Capitals . After their financial problems became too obvious, however, he switched to the then reigning German champion Adler Mannheim , which he left in 2003 to return to his native Russia.

First, the rumor arose that Vorobyov's move to Russia was just a tactical maneuver to return to his old club, Frankfurt Lions, without the Mannheim managers, who probably would not have agreed to a direct change to the league rivals from Main, could have any influence. But these rumors quickly turned out to be false, because Ilya Vorobjow initially played for three years for HK Lada Tolyatti , where his father Pyotr Vorobjow was coach, and then moved to HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk . During the 2006/07 season, the attacker left Magnitogorsk for Khimik Moskovskaya Oblast.

On July 12, 2007 Vorobjow signed a one-year contract for the 2007/08 season at his old employer Frankfurt Lions , which was extended after the season. During a cup game against the Heilbronner Falken , Vorobjow suffered a concussion, which is why he could only play seven games for the Hessians in the main round in 2008/09 . In these seven missions he scored three goals and provided an assist. In the play-off qualification against the Hamburg Freezers , the Russian scored one goal and provided two assists in five games. Following the 2009/10 season , he ended his career.

International

Vorobyov represented Russia at the U18 European Junior Championship in 1993 and the 1995 World Junior Championship .

As a trainer and functionary

After his career, Vorobyov worked in the management of the national team before he was hired as an assistant coach under his father Pyotr at Loko Yaroslavl, the junior team of Lokomotive Yaroslavl , before the 2011/12 season . In November 2011 he was promoted to assistant coach of the men's team, which was then taking part in the second-rate Vysschaja Hockey League . For the 2012/13 season he was signed as an assistant coach by HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk . In October 2015, after the demotion of Mike Keenan, he was promoted to head coach and won the Gagarin Cup , the KHL championship trophy , with the team at the end of the season . A year later he led his team again to the playoff final before he was fired in November 2017.

From 2016, Vorobjow was Oleg Snarok's assistant coach for the Russian national team in parallel to his involvement with Metallurg, and during this time he won two bronze medals with the national team at world championships and the gold medal (under a neutral flag) at the 2018 Winter Olympics . Subsequently, Snarok resigned as national coach and Vorobyov was appointed his successor a month before the 2018 World Cup in Denmark . In the 2018/19 season, he also held the post of head coach at the Russian first division club SKA Saint Petersburg .

After losing the semi-final and winning the bronze medal at the 2019 World Cup , Vorobyov was dismissed as both national coach and SKA head coach and replaced by his assistant Alexei Kudaschow . Shortly after the start of the 2019/20 season, Vorobyov returned to Metallurg Magnitogorsk, where he replaced Josef Jandač as head coach.

Achievements and Awards

Career statistics

Regular season Play-offs
season team league Sp T V Pt SM Sp T V Pt SM
1993/94 Frankfurt ESC 2nd BL 47 19th 28 47 64 - - - - -
1994/95 Frankfurt Lions DEL 18th 4th 13 17th 45 4th 1 2 3 4th
1995/96 Frankfurt Lions DEL 20th 4th 12 16 49 - - - - -
1996/97 Frankfurt Lions DEL 32 12 13 25th 36 - - - - -
1997/98 Frankfurt Lions DEL 47 14th 19th 33 96 - - - - -
1998/99 Frankfurt Lions DEL 22nd 6th 3 9 49 - - - - -
1999/00 Krefeld penguins DEL 56 24 28 52 61 4th 0 2 2 12
2000/01 Krefeld penguins DEL 53 16 15th 31 75 - - - - -
2001/02 Adler Mannheim DEL 46 15th 17th 32 31 12 3 2 5 14th
2002/03 Adler Mannheim DEL 45 7th 14th 21st 30th 5 1 1 2 16
2003/04 HK Lada Tolyatti RSL 54 8th 14th 22nd 120 6th 0 0 0 4th
2004/05 HK Lada Tolyatti RSL 58 12 15th 27 60 10 3 5 8th 12
2005/06 HK Lada Tolyatti RSL 14th 1 5 6th 16 - - - - -
2005/06 HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk RSL 29 5 7th 12 14th 11 1 2 3 6th
2006/07 HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk RSL 21st 2 2 4th 24 - - - - -
2006/07 Chimik Moskovskaya Oblast RSL 28 2 8th 10 22nd 7th 0 0 0 22nd
2007/08 Frankfurt Lions DEL 55 13 23 36 66 12 3 6th 9 4th
2008/09 Frankfurt Lions DEL 7th 3 1 4th 2 5 1 2 3 2
2009/10 Frankfurt Lions DEL 2 0 0 0 6th
DEL total 403 118 158 276 546 42 9 15th 24 52
Super league overall 204 30th 51 81 256 27 4th 7th 11 22nd

( 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 )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Новости клуба - Формирование нового тренерского штаба «Металлурга». In: metallurg.ru. May 3, 2012, accessed October 26, 2017 .
  2. ^ Coach castling in the KHL. In: hockeyfans.ch. October 17, 2015, accessed October 23, 2015 .
  3. Воробьев уволен с поста тренера магнитогорского ХК "Металлург", и.о. назначен Козлов. In: rsport.ria.ru. November 2, 2017. Retrieved November 3, 2017 .
  4. After Olympic triumph: Russia's coach Oleg Snarok resigns. In: sport1.de. April 12, 2018. Retrieved June 20, 2018 .
  5. Not a good sign for Russian ice hockey: What the replacement of Ilya Vorobyov in the national team and SKA says. In: eishockeynews .de. July 9, 2019, accessed September 9, 2019 .
  6. Jandac leaves Metallurg, Wolski reaches milestone - KHL week in review. In: en.khl.ru. September 9, 2019, accessed September 12, 2019 .