Pavel Nikolaevich Boichenko
Date of birth | April 30, 1975 |
place of birth | Moscow , Russian SFSR |
size | 182 cm |
Weight | 96 kg |
position | Right wing |
Shot hand | Right |
Career stations | |
1993-1999 | Krylya Sovetov Moscow |
1999-2001 | HK CSKA Moscow |
2001-2002 | HK Lada Tolyatti |
2002-2003 | HK Spartak Moscow |
2003-2004 | SKA Saint Petersburg |
2004-2005 | Chimik Voskressensk |
2005 | Chimik Moskovskaya Oblast |
2005-2009 | Vityaz Chekhov |
2009 | SKA Saint Petersburg |
2009-2010 | HK tractor Chelyabinsk |
2010-2011 | Vityaz Chekhov |
Pawel Nikolajewitsch Boitschenko ( Russian Павел Николаевич Бойченко ; born April 30, 1975 in Moscow , Russian SFSR ) is a Russian ice hockey player who was last under contract with Vityas Chekhov in the Continental Hockey League until 2011 .
Career
Pavel Boitschenko began his career as an ice hockey player in his hometown in the youth department of Krylja Sowetow Moscow , for whose professional team he was first active from 1993 to 1996 in the International Hockey League and then for three years in its follow-up Superliga . After Krylya Sovetov had to accept relegation to the Wysschaja Liga , the second Russian division, in the 1998/99 season , the winger moved to Krylya Sowetov's city neighbor HK CSKA Moscow . There he spent two seasons before standing on the ice for a year each for the HK Lada Tolyatti and the HK Spartak Moscow .
In the summer of 2003 Boitschenko signed a contract with SKA Saint Petersburg , which he left after a year and a half during the 2004/05 season and ended the season at Chimik Voskressensk . After the professional division of Chimik was relocated to Mytishchi and changed its name to Chimik Moskovskaya Oblast , the former junior international stayed with the team before he was committed by Vityas Chekhov after only 18 appearances during the 2005/06 season . There he became a leading player in the following years and he was able to increase his points yield to over 20 per season. The 2008/09 season began again with the right-handed shooter at Vitjas, who had been included in the newly founded Continental Hockey League before the season . After eight goals and 15 assists in 40 games, he signed a contract with his ex-club SKA Saint Petersburg, for which he scored three goals and provided two assists in a total of 13 games by the end of the season. In the playoffs for the Gagarin Cup he was defeated with the SKA in the first round to HK Spartak Moscow.
The 2009/10 season spent Boitschenko the Traktor Chelyabinsk . There he was able to achieve 30 scorer points, including 18 goals, in 56 games in the main round. This was the season with the highest number of points and goals in his career to date. In the playoffs he and his team lost in the first round, as in the previous year, this time to HK Metallurg Magnitogorsk . The Russian himself was on the ice in all four playoff games, but remained pointless in these. In the 2010/11 season he played again for his former club Vitjas Chekhov. However, his contract was not subsequently extended.
International
For Russia , Boitschenko took part in the U18 European Junior Championship in 1993 and the 1995 World Junior Championship .
Achievements and Awards
- 1993 silver medal at the U18 European Junior Championship
- 1995 silver medal at the Junior World Championship
statistics
Seasons | Games | Gates | Assists | Points | Penalty minutes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
KHL main round | 3 | 154 | 33 | 34 | 67 | 158 |
KHL playoffs | 2 | 7th | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4th |
Super League main round | 12 | 530 | 66 | 123 | 189 | 412 |
Super League Playoffs | 3 | 8th | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
(Status: end of the 2010/11 season)
Web links
- Pavel Boitschenko at boeboda.ru
- Pawel Boitschenko at hockeydb.com (English)
- Pawel Boitschenko at eliteprospects.com (English)
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Boitschenko, Pavel Nikolaevich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Boychenko, Pavel (English spelling); Бойченко, Павел Николаевич (Russian spelling) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Russian ice hockey player |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 30, 1975 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Moscow , Russian SFSR |