Yaroslavl locomotive

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HK locomotive Yaroslavl
ХК Локомотив Ярославль
HK locomotive Yaroslavl ХК Локомотив Ярославль
Greatest successes
Club information
history JaMZ Yaroslavl (1959–1963)
Trud Yaroslavl (1963–1964)
Motor Yaroslavl (1964–1965)
Torpedo Yaroslavl (1965–2000)
Locomotive Yaroslavl (since 2000)
Location Yaroslavl , Russia
Club colors Red, white, blue
league Continental hockey league
Venue Arena 2000
capacity 9070 seats
executive Director Yuri Yakovlev
Head coach Craig MacTavish
captain Staffan Kronwall
Season 2018/19 3rd place (west), playoff quarter-finals

The HK Lokomotive Yaroslavl ( Russian Хоккейный Клуб Локомотив Ярославль / Chokkejnyj Klub Lokomotiw Yaroslavl) is an ice hockey club founded in 1959 from the Russian city ​​of Yaroslavl . The club has been part of the Continental Hockey League again since 2012 . After a plane crash in September 2011, in which almost the entire team was killed, a new team was built in the game operations of the Wysschaja Hockey League . Yaroslavl locomotive is owned by the Russian railway company Rossijskije zhelesnyje dorogi .

The club colors of the club, which is based in the Arena 2000 , which has a capacity of 9070 spectators and was completed in 2001 , are red, white and blue. In its more than 50-year history, the club founded as JaMZ Yaroslavl celebrated a total of three Russian championship titles in 1997 , 2002 and 2003 . Furthermore, there is a Russian runner -up title from 2008 and a KHL runner -up title from 2009 .

history

In Yaroslavl teams such as Lokomotive Yaroslavl (1949-1955), Spartak Yaroslavl (1955-1956) and Chimik Yaroslavl (1956-1957) were active, all of which took part in the regional championship of the Russian SFSR . In 1959, the JaMZ Yaroslavl team was founded from the local engine factory JaMZ , which initially took part in the regional league of the Soviet Union, Class B. In the following years, the team established itself within the league before it was renamed Trud Yaroslavl in 1963 and Motor Yaroslavl in 1964 .

In the second and third division (1965-1987)

Torpedo Yaroslavl versus Salawat Yulayev Ufa , 1983

In 1965 the club was given a new name, which it was to carry until 2000 - Torpedo Yaroslavl. In addition, the construction of an open ice rink began, which was completed during the 1966/67 season and was later called the Sports Palace Awtodisel . In 1967 Torpedo won the championship of his group of class B and thus achieved promotion to the third division, class A, 3rd group . Two years later Torpedo won the western season of Class A, 2nd group , but was unable to move up into this due to a reduction in the 1st group of Class A. Through another league reform in 1970, Torpedo was divided into the third division, which was then called the Wtoraja League . In the following years, the team occupied mostly middle places in this division, before winning the western season of the Wtoraja League in 1983, the rise in the second-rate Perwaja League succeeded. In the first season of this league, Torpedo managed to establish itself at this league level with eighth place. In 1987 the club reached first place in the west season after the main round and thus qualified for the promotion tournament. This completed Torpedo with first place and thus rose for the first time in the top division of the Soviet Union, the then Wysschaja Liga .

Establishment in the highest league (1987–1997)

Between the rise in 1987 and the last season of the Soviet championship, Torpedo occupied mostly back places, except in 1990 , when Torpedo took seventh place among 16 participants in the championship round. Well-known torpedo players of this time were Alexander Sybin , Vyacheslav Uwayev , Dmitri Yushkewitsch , Andrei Zhukov , Igor Maslennikow , Sergei Saizew , Vitaly Karamnov . In the 1990/91 season , a similarly good ranking succeeded when Torpedo finished seventh in the preliminary and championship rounds.

In 1992 the International Hockey League was founded and Torpedo was included in it. Torpedo reached the playoffs in each of the following four years, with 1995 winning the preliminary round West. In the playoffs, the team failed either in the second round or in the quarterfinals.

In 1996 the International Hockey League was transferred to the Russian Ice Hockey Championship , which was later renamed the Super League . The first season of the reformed league was dominated by Torpedo Yaroslavl, Ak Bars Kazan and the HK Lada Tolyatti . These three teams occupied the first three places in the final round and were therefore favored for the playoffs. In this Torpedo defeated Neftechimik Nizhnekamsk 2-0, in the quarter-finals HK Dynamo Moscow 2-0, in the semifinals Salawat Julajew Ufa 2-0 and qualified for the playoff final against Lada Tolyatti. Torpedo also won the final series without defeat with 3-0 against Lada and thus achieved the greatest success in the club's history, the Russian championship . Strikers Andrej Skabelka , Alexei Gorschkow , Aleksandrs Ņiživijs and Witalij Lytwynenko as well as goalkeeper Jegor Podomazki , who achieved three shutouts and an average goal counter of 0.98 in nine playoff games, played a major role in this success .

Russian champion 1997
Logo of Torpedo Yaroslavl

Goalkeepers: Oleg Bratasch , Yegor Podomazki

Defenders: Alexei Amelin , Mikhail Donika , Ilya Gorochov , Uladsimir Kopaz , Dmitri Krassotkin , Oleg Polkownikow , Sergei Zhukov , Andrei Sobolew , Alexei Wassiljew

Attackers: Vladimir Antipov , Alexander Ardaschew , Sergei Gorbachev , Alexei Gorshkov , Anatoly Koweschnikow , Roman Ljaschenko , Vitaly Lytwynenko , Aleksandrs Ņiživijs , Vladimir Samylin , Denis Schwidki , Andrei Skabelka , Alexei Trasseuch , Sergei Tschernjawski , Dmitri Wlassenkow

Coaching staff: Pyotr Vorobjow , Nikolai Kazakow

Time as a top team (1997-2001)

Due to the championship title in 1997 Torpedo qualified for the European Hockey League 1997/98 , where the team won Group D with five wins from six games and prevailed in the quarter-finals against HK Lada Tolyatti. In the semifinals, which took place as part of the Final Four , Torpedo lost 0: 1 to HD Dynamo Moscow. In the Russian championship of the 1997/98 season Torpedo took first place in the West season and was third in the final round, with no playoffs being held. Instead, a cup competition was played in which Torpedo reached the semi-finals. A year later, the team reached the playoff semifinals after a fifth place in the main round, in which they lost to HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk with 1: 3 and ended the season in third place.

In 1998 Torpedo took part in the IIHF Continental Cup and was automatically qualified for the semi-final group P as the host team. With two wins and one defeat, Torpedo took second place in the group, while the group winner, HK Awangard Omsk , made it to the final. In the Russian championship Torpedo Yaroslavl was one of the top teams and reached fourth place in 199 and fifth in 2000. In 2000, the club was also renamed Lokomotive , as the Russian railroad Rossijskije schelesnyje dorogi became the main owner of the club.

Championship title 2002

Before the 2001/02 season , the Czech Vladimír Vůjtek was the first time a non-Russian coach committed. He rebuilt the team and signed top performers such as Andrei Kowalenko , Jan Peterek , Iwan Tkachenko , Wadym Schachrajtschuk , Alexander Guskow and Martin Štrbák during the season . He also expanded the team to include young players such as Alexander Suglobow , Denis Grebeschkow and Artyom Krjukow . The team changed in this way was quickly successful and dominated the main round of the Russian championship with 37 wins, 6 draws and 8 defeats. In the playoffs she prevailed 3-0 in the quarter-finals against Krylja Sowetow Moscow , 3-0 in the semifinals against Metallurg Magnitogorsk and 3-0 in the final against Ak Bars Kazan and won the second championship title in the club's history. In the playoffs the team achieved nine wins in a row, in which the team received only 9 goals and scored 28 goals themselves. Logically, coach Vladimír Vůjtek, striker Andrei Kowalenko, goalkeeper Jegor Podomazki and Alexei Amelin received individual awards from the Russian league.

Russian champion 2002
Logo of the Yaroslavl locomotive

Goalkeepers: Andrei Malkow , Yegor Podomazki

Defenders: Alexei Amelin , Ilja Gorochow , Denis Grebeschkow , Alexander Guskow , Dmitri Krassotkin , Yuri Kuznetsov , Sergei Zhukov , Andrei Sobolew , Martin Štrbák , Alexei Wassiljew

Attackers: Vladimir Antipov , Alexander Ardaschew , Anton But , Vyacheslav Buzajew , Sergei Korolev , Andrei Kovalenko , Artem Kryukov , Ivan Neprjajew , January Peterek , Konstantin Rudenko , Vladimir Samylin , Wadym Schachrajtschuk , Sergei Zhukov , Alexander Skugarew , Alexander Suglobow , Ivan Tkachenko , Dmitri Vlassenkow , Pavel Vorobyov

Head coach: Vladimír Vůjtek

Championship title 2003

In the summer of 2002, the management of Lokomotiv managed to keep the master squad together and signed supplementary players such as Yuri Buzajew and Sergei Nemtschinow . Vladimír Vůjtek completed the team again with young players such as Grigori Schafigulin , Andrei Perwyschin and Konstantin Glasatschow and again formed a successful team that finished the main round of the 2002/03 season in first place with an eleven point advantage. The team achieved 34 wins with 7 draws and ten defeats. Lokomotive scored a total of 163 goals and was, together with HK Awangard Omsk, the most dangerous team in the league. In addition, Lokomotive took part in January 2003 in the final tournament of the Continental Cup , which she finished in second place behind Jokerit Helsinki.

In the Superliga playoffs, the team defeated Salawat Yulayev Ufa 3-0 in the first round, Lada Tolyatti 3-0 in the semifinals and met Severstal Tscherepowez in the final series . Lokomotive won the first two games of the series 3-1 and 4-1 respectively, before Sewerstal prevailed 4-2 in the third game. In the fourth game of the final, Lokomotive achieved the decisive third victory with a 4-0 win and thus won the second championship title in a row. The team's top performers were strikers Vyacheslav Buzayev , Andrei Kowalenko, Vladimir Antipov , defender Alexander Guskow and goalkeeper Yegor Podomazki. Kowalenko, Guskow and Podomazki received the respective player trophies after the end of the season.

Russian champion 2003
Logo of the Yaroslavl locomotive

Goalkeepers: Andrei Malkow , Yegor Podomazki

Defenders: Ilya Gorochow , Denis Grebeschkow , Alexander Guskow , Yevgeni Koroljow , Dmitri Krassotkin , Andrei Perwyshin , Radim Tesařík , Alexei Wassiljew

Attackers: Vladimir Antipov , Anton But , Yuri Buzajew , Vyacheslav Buzajew , Konstantin Glasatschow , Andrei Kovalenko , Sergei Nemchinov , Ivan Neprjajew , January Peterek , Konstantin Rudenko , Vladimir Samylin , Grigori Schafigulin , Sergei Zhukov , Alexander Suglobow , Ivan Tkachenko , Dmitri Wlassenkow , Pavel Vorobyov

Coach: Vladimír Vůjtek , Vladimir Jursinow

After this success, Vladimír Vůjtek left the club after accepting a high-value contract offer from Ak Bars Kazan . The coaching office was taken over by the previous assistant coach Wladimir Jursinow , who was replaced after a series of defeats in October 2003 first by Vladimir Kryuchkov and in November by Július Šupler . Under Šupler, the team was able to find their way back to their old level of performance and reached seventh place in the main round. Previously, Lokomotive had taken part in the Spengler Cup at the end of the year , in which the Šupler team took third place. In the playoff quarter-finals of the Superliga, the team of Lokomotiv Lada Tolyatti lost 3-0.

Player of Locomotive Yaroslavl in 2009

In the summer of 2004, the club's management signed Kari Heikkilä, a Finnish coach, who put the team together again. Due to the lockout in the National Hockey League , the club was able to sign NHL players like Marc Lamothe , Denis Schwidki , Pjotr ​​Stschastliwy , Nikolai Antropow , Karel Rachůnek , Alexander Karpovzew and Alexei Yashin . The newly formed team finished the main round in fifth place and advanced to the playoff semifinals after a 3-1 series against Ak Bars Kazan. In this it met again on the team of Lada Tolyatti, who lost it in three games. Lokomotiv won the series for third place 2-0 against Awangard Omsk. After the season, all NHL players except Rachůnek and Stschastliwy left the club. With Vladimir Jursinow a new head coach was committed, who led the team to third place in the main round and into the playoff semi-finals. In this she was defeated by Ak Bars Kazan with 0: 3.

Successes in the KHL (2008-2011)

In the first season of the KHL, which was founded in 2008, Lokomotiv Yaroslavl under head coach Kari Heikkilä won the Kharlamov Division and finished third in the main round with 111 points. In the playoffs, the team defeated Neftechimik Nizhnekamsk in the round of 16, HK Spartak Moscow in the quarter-finals and Metallurg Magnitogorsk in the semi-finals. In the playoff final for the Gagarin Cup , Lokomotiv met Ak Bars Kazan. In an exciting best-of-seven series, Lokomotive won the first, third and fifth game, so that after six games it was a 3-3 draw. In the decisive seventh game, Alexei Morosow scored the only goal for Kazan and thus secured his team the championship title.

After the end of the season, Yaroslavl's goalkeeper Georgi Gelaschwili was honored as the best goalkeeper and Yuri Jakowlew as the best general manager of the KHL. Gelashvili was also elected to the league's all-star team. Team captain Alexei Yashin was one of the top scorers of the season with 47 points.

Before the following season Lokomotive was transferred to the Tarassow Division. At the end of the main round, the club took third place in the division and fifth in the Western Conference with 96 points. With victories over Atlant Mytishchi and HK Spartak Moscow in the quarter and semi-finals, he reached the conference final, in which the team lost 3: 4 to HK MWD Balaschicha . It reached fourth place, while Lokomotives strikers Alexander Galimow and Gennady Tschurilow were among the best scorers of the KHL playoffs with 14 points. In addition, Georgi Gelashvili again showed very good performances in the playoffs with a catch quota of 93.3 percent and an average goal against goal of 1.89. There were individual trophies at the end of the season for Churilow with the Ironman Award and for Sergei Zhukow with the award as the fairest player .

Russia's then President Dmitry Medvedev lays flowers near the site of the accident

Plane crash (2011)

On September 7, 2011, a Yakovlev Yak-42 aircraft crashed near Yaroslavl shortly after taking off from Tunoschna Airport . A total of 43 of the 45 inmates were killed in the crash. With the exception of the players Daniil Jerdakow , Artur Amirow and Maxim Sjusjakin and the Finnish goalkeeping coach Jorma Valtonen, the entire team was on the plane. The machine was on its way to the Belarusian capital Minsk , where Lokomotiv's first championship game of the 2011/12 season against HK Dinamo Minsk was to take place.

Only striker Alexander Galimov survived the crash, who died five days later in a Moscow hospital from his serious injuries.

Squad at the
beginning of the 2011/12 season

Logo of the Yaroslavl locomotive

Goalkeepers: Stefan Liv , Olexander Wjuchin

Defenders: Vitali Anikejenko , Mikhail Balandin , Robert Dietrich , Marat Kalimulin , Karel Rachůnek , Ruslan Salej , Maxim Shuvalov , Kārlis Skrastiņš , Pawel Trachanow , Juri Urytschew

Attackers: Pavol Demitra , Alexander Galimow , Artyom Jarchuk , Alexander Kaljanin , Andrei Kirjuchin , Nikita Klyukin , Jan Marek , Sergei Ostaptschuk , Pavel Snurnitsyn , Daniil Sobchenko , Ivan Tkachenko , Gennadi Tschurilow , Josef Vašíček , Alexander Wassjunov

Head coach: Brad McCrimmon    Assistant coach: Alexander Karpovzew , Igor Korolev

Officials & supervisors: Yuri Bachwalow, Alexander Beljajew, Mikalaj Krywanossau , Evgeni Kunnow, Vyacheslav Kuznetsov, Vladimir Piskunow, Evgeny Sidorow, Andrei Simin

The league management of the Continental Hockey League announced the day after the accident that the game would be suspended until further notice. The start of the season has therefore been postponed indefinitely. A little later, the start of the season was scheduled for September 12th. The Kubok Otkrytija , on the day of which the accident happened, was renamed the Locomotive Cup .

Reconstruction of the team (since 2011)

Although the club lost almost its entire team in the crash, the KHL President Vyacheslav Fetissov announced on September 8th that the members of the new squad would be introduced on September 11th. Three days after the accident, team president Yuri Jakowlew announced that the club would suspend play in the 2011/12 KHL season. However, the newly formed team should compete in the second-rate Wysschaja Hockey League from December 2011 onwards and be automatically set for their play-offs .

The first game of the newly formed team, which consisted of their own and young players from other clubs, took place on December 12, 2011. In a sold-out arena in 2000, Loko defeated the VHL championship leader, Neftjanik Almetjewsk , 5-1.

For the 2012/13 season, the club was accepted back into the KHL and signed a team consisting of seasoned international professionals and young talent.

In the 2012/2013 season , the club had a second team that continued to play in the Vysschaya Hockey League and acted as the farm team of the professional team. She finished 10th and was eliminated in the playoff round of 16 with 2: 3 against HK Buran Voronezh. After the season, the second team was disbanded.

Squad for the 2019/20 season

Status: August 2020

No. Nat. player Item Date of birth in the team since place of birth
32 RussiaRussia Ilya Konovalov G July 13, 1998 2017 Yaroslavl , Russia
CanadaCanada Eddie Pasquale G November 20, 1990 2020 Toronto , Ontario , Canada
67 RussiaRussia Maxim Afanasiev D. January 11, 1998 2018 Yaroslavl , Russia
61 RussiaRussia Nikolai Awerin D. September 16, 1996 2018 Yaroslavl , Russia
RussiaRussia Denis Barantsev D. April 12, 1992 2020 Tolyatti , Russian SFSR
RussiaRussia Alexei Marchenko D. 02nd January 1992 2020 Moscow , Russia
93 RussiaRussia Daniil Missjul D. October 20, 2000 2019 Minsk , Belarus
FinlandFinland Atte Ohtamaa D. 0November 6, 1987 2020 Nivala , Finland
21st RussiaRussia Maxim Ospiov D. August 31, 1993 2018 Yaroslavl , Russia
87 RussiaRussia Rushan Rafikov D. May 15, 1995 2015 Saratov , Russia
2 KazakhstanKazakhstan Roman Savchenko D. July 28, 1988 2019 Ust-Kamenogorsk , Kazakh SSR
31 RussiaRussia Mikhail Sidorov D. June 25, 1997 2019 Yaroslavl , Russia
73 RussiaRussia Nikita Cherepanov D. November 19, 1995 2016 Yaroslavl , Russia
91 RussiaRussia Denis Alexeyev C. 0October 1, 1997 2017 Gubkin , Russia
29 RussiaRussia Yegor AwerinA. LW August 25, 1989 2012 Omsk , Russian SFSR
34 RussiaRussia Artyom Ilienko C. April 30, 1996 2015 Yaroslavl , Russia
10 RussiaRussia Georgi Ivanov C. September 25, 1998 2017 Yaroslavl , Russia
28 RussiaRussia Artur Kayumov RW February 14, 1998 2016 Podgorny , Russia
RussiaRussia Yegor Korschkov RW July 10, 1996 2020 Novosibirsk , Russia
51 RussiaRussia United StatesUnited States Nikolai Kovalenko RW October 17, 1999 2018 Raleigh , North Carolina , USA
63 RussiaRussia Pawel Kraskowski C. September 11, 1996 2013 Yaroslavl , Russia
58 SwedenSweden Anton Lander C. April 24, 1991 2019 Sundsvall , Sweden
84 RussiaRussia Pavel Kudryavtsev LW 0September 5, 1997 2018 Yaroslavl , Russia
SwedenSweden Magnus Pääjärvi-Svensson LW April 12, 1991 2019 Norrkoping , Sweden
SwedenSweden André Petersson W. September 11, 1990 2020 Olofström , Sweden
15th RussiaRussia Alexander Switov C. 03rd November 1982 2019 Omsk , Russian SFSR


Season statistics

Vysschaya League (1987-1992)

Abbreviations: Sp = games, S = wins, U = draws, N = defeats, pts = points, T = goals scored, GT = goals conceded

season Sp S. U N Pt T GT Place
round
Place
league
Playoffs
1987/88 26th 11 2 13 24 81 100 11. - not qualified
36 23 2 11 48 151 102 2. 12.
1988/89 26th 10 3 13 23 81 87 11. - no event
36 24 2 10 50 167 111 3. 13.
1989/90 30th 16 2 12 34 93 86 6th - no event
18th 5 4th 9 14th 53 60 7th 7th
1990/91 28 13 4th 11 30th 83 80 7th - no event
18th 4th 6th 8th 14th 48 59 7th 7th
1991/92 30th 11 4th 15th 26th 92 107 11. 11. not qualified
total 248 117 29 102 263 769 792   no playoff participation

International Hockey League (1992–1996)

Abbreviations: Sp = games, S = wins, U = draws, N = defeats, Pkt = points (bonus points in brackets), T = goals scored, GT = goals conceded

season Sp S. U N Pt T GT Place
conference
Place
league
Playoffs
1992/93 20th 6th 2 13 14th 42 60 5th, group 1 - Victory in the round of 16, 2-0 ( Salawat Julajew Ufa ),
defeat in the quarter-finals, 0-2 ( HK Dynamo Moscow )
22nd 14th 4th 3 32 84 46 5th, west 11.
1993/94 46 28 3 15th 59 181 96 - 5. Victory in the round of 16, 2-0 ( HK Pārdaugava Riga ),
defeat in the quarter-finals, 0-2 ( HK Traktor Tscheljabinsk )
1994/95 52 33 4th 15th 70 152 96 1st, west 5. Victory in the round of 16, 2-0 ( Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg ),
defeat in the quarter-finals, 0-2 ( Salawat Julajew Ufa )
1995/96 26th 15th 4th 7th 34 83 58 2nd, west - Defeat in the round of 16, 1: 2 ( Rubin Tyumen )
26th 15th 1 10 31 (+6) 70 55 - 6th
total 192 111 18th 63 240 (+6) 612 411   4 playoff appearances,
7 series: 3 wins, 4 losses,
15 games: 7 wins, 8 losses

Super League (1996-2008)

Abbreviations: Sp = games, S = victories, OTS = victories after overtime , SOS = victories after shootout , U = draws, OTN = defeats after overtime, SON = defeats after shootout, N = defeats, pts = points, T = goals scored , GT = goals conceded

season Sp S. OTS SOS U SON OTN N Pt T GT Place
conference
Place
league
Playoffs
1996/97 24 16 - - 4th - - 4th 36 65 31 2nd, west - Victory in the round of 16, 2-0 ( Neftechimik Nizhnekamsk )
victory in the quarter-finals, 2-0 ( HK Dynamo Moscow )
victory in the semi-finals, 2-0 ( Salawat Julajew Ufa )
victory in the final, 3-0 ( HK Lada Tolyatti )
20th 12 - - 4th - - 4th 28 67 35 - 3.
1997/98 26th 19th - - 3 - - 4th 41 74 37 1st, west - Victory in the round of 16, 2: 0 ( Chimik Woskressensk ),
victory in the quarter-finals, 2: 1 ( HK Awangard Omsk ),
defeat in the semi-finals, 0: 2 ( HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk )
20th 14th - - 3 - - 3 31 56 23 - 3.
1998/99 42 26th - - 5 - - 11 57 99 61 - 5. Victory in the round of 16, 3: 0 ( HK CSKA Moscow ),
victory in the quarter-finals, 3: 0 ( HK Awangard Omsk )
defeat in the semi-finals, 1: 3 ( HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk )
1999/00 38 21st 2 - 5 - 0 10 72 91 59 - 4th Victory in the round of 16, 3: 2 ( Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod ),
defeat in the quarter-finals, 2: 3 ( Metallurg Novokuznetsk )
2000/01 34 14th 3 - 5 - 1 11 54 89 64 - 7th Victory in the quarter-finals, 3: 1 ( Ak Bars Kazan ),
defeat in the semi-finals, 2: 3 ( HK Awangard Omsk )
10 5 1 - 1 - 1 2 19th 29 20th - 7th
2001/02 51 35 2 - 6th - 2 6th 117 167 80 - 1. Victory in the quarter-finals, 3-0 ( Krylja Sowetow Moscow )
victory in the semifinals, 3-0 ( HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk )
victory in the final, 3-0 ( Ak Bars Kazan )
2002/03 51 32 2 - 7th - 3 7th 110 163 90 - 1. Victory in the quarter-finals, 3-0 ( Salawat Julajew Ufa )
victory in the semifinals, 3-0 ( HK Lada Tolyatti )
victory in the final, 3-1 ( Severstal Tscherepowez )
2003/04 60 27 2 - 9 - 1 21st 95 156 123 - 7th Quarter-finals defeat, 3-0 ( HK Lada Tolyatti )
2004/05 60 29 2 - 12 - 2 15th 105 159 104 - 5. Victory in the quarter-finals, 3-2 ( Ak Bars Kazan ),
defeat in the semifinals, 0-3 ( HK Lada Tolyatti )
2005/06 51 28 0 - 10 - 2 11 96 168 104 - 3. Victory in the round of 16, 3: 1 ( HK Sibir Novosibirsk ),
victory in the quarter-finals, 3: 1 ( Chimik Moskowskaja Oblast ),
defeat in the semi-finals, 0: 3 ( Ak Bars Kazan )
2006/07 54 25th 2 - 8th - 1 18th 88 153 136 - 7th Victory in the round of 16, 3-0 ( HK Dynamo Moscow ),
defeat in the quarter-finals, 1: 3 ( HK Awangard Omsk )
2007/08 57 29 2 3 - 4th 0 19th 101 167 148 - 5. Victory in the round of 16, 3: 1 ( HK Lada Tolyatti )
victory in the quarter-finals, 3: 1 ( SKA Sankt Petersburg )
victory in the semi-finals, 3: 0 ( HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk )
defeat in the final, 2: 3 ( Salawat Julajew Ufa )
total 598 332 18th 3 82 4th 13 146 1050 1703 1115   12 playoff appearances
32 series: 23 wins, 9 losses
111 games: 74 wins, 37 losses

Continental Hockey League (2008-2011, since 2012)

Abbreviations: Sp = games, S = victories, OTS = victories after overtime , SOS = victories after shootout , OTN = defeats after overtime, SON = defeats after shootout, N = defeats, pts = points, T = goals scored, GT = goals conceded

season Sp S. OTS SOS SON OTN N Pt T GT Place
division
Place
Conference
Place
league
Playoffs
2008/09 56 32 2 2 3 4th 13 111 175 111 1st, Kharlamov - 3. Victory in the round of 16, 3: 1 ( Neftechimik Nizhnekamsk ),
victory in the quarter-finals, 3: 0 ( HK Spartak Moscow ),
victory in the semi-finals, 4: 1 ( HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk )
defeat in the final, 3: 4 ( Ak Bars Kazan )
2009/10 56 26th 3 2 4th 4th 17th 96 163 132 3rd, Tarasov 5th, west 7th Victory in the conference quarter-finals, 3: 1 ( Atlant Mytishchi ),
victory in the conference semi-finals, 4: 2 ( HK Spartak Moscow ),
defeat in the conference final, 3: 4 ( HK MWD Balaschicha )
2010/11 54 33 1 1 4th 1 14th 108 202 143 1st, Tarasov 1st, west 3. Victory in the conference quarter-finals, 4: 3 ( HK Dinamo Minsk )
victory in the conference semifinals, 4: 1 ( Dinamo Riga )
defeat in the conference final, 2: 4 ( Atlant Mytishchi )
2011/12 Participation in the Vysschaya Hockey League
2012/13 54 24 2 8th 0 0 18th 92 131 121 2nd, Tarasov 4th, west 8th. Conference quarterfinals defeat, 2-4 ( Severstal Tscherepowez )
total 220 145 8th 13 11 9 62 407 671 507   4 playoff appearances,
11 series: 7 wins, 4 losses,
60 games: 35 wins, 25 losses

Trainer

Surname Period
А. K. Schesterin 1959-1963
Yuri Trabut 1963-1964
S. Kwasnikov 1964-1965
B. Т. Kushtalov 1965-1971
Yuri Otschnew 1970-1971
Vitali I. Stain 1971-1973
NP Rodin 1973-1977
WI Surovtsev 1976-1980
Sergei Nikolaev 1980-1990
Albert Danilov 1990-1991
GN Mylnikow 1991-1993
Sergei Nikolaev 1992-1996
Pyotr Vorobyov 1996-2001
Vladimir Kryuchkov 2000-2001
Vladimír Vůjtek senior 2001-2003
Vladimir Yursinov April – October 2003
Vladimir Kryuchkov October – November 2003
Július Supler November 2003-2004
Kari Heikkilä 2004-2005
Vladimir Yursinov 2005 – September 2006
Nikolai Borschtschewski 2006-2007
Paul Gardner 2006-2007
Kari Heikkilä 2007-2010
Pyotr Vorobyov February – May 2010
Kai Suikkanen May – November 2010
Vladimír Vůjtek senior November 2010 – April 2011
Brad McCrimmon May – September 2011
Pyotr Vorobyov September 2011 – April 2012
Tom Rowe April 2012 - September 2013
Pyotr Vorobyov September 2013 - February 2014
Dave King February 2014 - June 2014
Sean Simpson June 2014 - Sept. 2014
Anatoly Chomenko Sept. 2014
Alexei Kudaschow Sept. 2014 - Oct. 2017
Dmitri Kwartalnow since Oct. 2017

Web links

Commons : Locomotive Yaroslavl  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ RIA Novosti
  2. hockeyarchives.ru, 1968/1969 23-й ЧЕМПИОНАТ СССР
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