Sergei Mikhailovich Shepelev

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RussiaRussia  Sergei Shepelev Ice hockey player
Sergei Shepelev
Date of birth October 13, 1955
place of birth Nizhny Tagil , Russian SFSR
position center
Shot hand Left
Career stations
1973-1974 Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk
1974-1976 SKA Sverdlovsk
1976-1979 Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk
1979-1988 HK Spartak Moscow

Sergei Michailowitsch Schepelew ( Russian Сергей Михайлович Шепелев ; born October 13, 1955 in Nizhny Tagil , Russian SFSR ) is a former Russian ice hockey player and current coach , who was last under contract with Amur Khabarovsk until December 2015 .

Career

Beginning in Nizhny Tagil and Sverdlovsk

Sergei Shepelev started ice hockey at a local amateur club called Olympia, and at the age of 13 he moved to the Sputnik Nizhny Tagil sports school . With the Sputnik juniors, he became Soviet runner-up four years later and was one of the top scorers in the finals. The talented striker caught the attention of the coach of Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk , Vladimir Shumkov, and joined the team in 1973. His first attack series partners at Avto were Alexander Kirpichev and Nikolai Krylow.

In 1975 Shepelev was drafted into military service and completed this at the Army Sports Club SKA Sverdlovsk . While he had played in the center position at Awto , he was used as a winger at SKA. He formed the SKA's second series of attacks with Alexander Kulikow and Boris Moltschanow. In the winter of 1975 Shepelev won the first, as yet unofficial, junior world championship with the Soviet junior national team . A few months later he finished his military service and received several offers, including from Spartak Moscow and Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk. Shepelev initially returned to his hometown and married his girlfriend Tatiana before continuing his career at Awto .

The next three seasons he played for Awtomobilist, where he rose in 1977 with the team from the second-rate Pervaya League in the Vysschaya League . He usually formed a storm line with Viktor Kutergin and Vladimir Shcheglow. In the 1978/79 season he scored 24 goals and 17 assists and was one of the most successful points collectors in the league, so he again received an offer from Spartak Moscow, which he accepted this time.

Success with Spartak Moscow

Shepelev played for Spartak Moscow for a total of nine years and was runner-up four times and finished third twice in the Soviet championship. He developed a very close relationship with the coach Boris Kulagin , who contributed significantly to the development of Schepelew's talent. In the fall of 1980, Spartak Moscow was commissioned to nominate a series of attacks for the national team. Kulagin selected the wingers Viktor Shalimov and Sergei Kapustin and placed Shepelev in the center position. At the Izvestia Cup in 1980 , this Spartak series of attacks against Finland debuted, with Kapustin being replaced by Sergei Svetlov due to an angina .

In spring 1988, the then 33-year-old Shepelev received permission from the Soviet Sports Committee to continue his career in Japan. At that time, however, a rule was put into force in Japan that excluded foreigners from active gaming. So he ended his career and started working as a trainer in Japan.

Shepelev scored a total of 189 goals in 453 games in the highest Soviet league.

International

After Schepelew had won the first unofficial junior world championship in 1975 with the junior national team, he was on the ice for the first time for the Soviet national team on December 16, 1980 as part of the Izvestia Cup against Finland . At the Ice Hockey World Championship in 1981 he won his first gold medal in the men's area and was able to repeat this success in 1982 and 1983. However, he had his international breakthrough at the Canada Cup in 1981 , when he scored three goals in a row in the 8-1 win over Canada and increased the score from 1-1 to 4-1. He put both the best line of Canadians with young star Wayne Gretzky , Guy Lafleur and Marcel Dionne , as well as the new parade line of the Soviets around Vladimir Krutow , Igor Larionow and Sergei Makarow in the shade. Schepelev's attack series (with Sergei Kapustin and Viktor Shalimov) was one of the best storm formations in the world at the beginning of the 1980s and was one of the building blocks of the three world championship titles of the Sbornaja between 1981 and 1983. However, as Kapustin and Shalimov got older, the series lost theirs Impact and Shepelev never found their way back to the achievements of the early 1980s after the two left.

His international career was crowned with a gold medal at the 1984 Winter Olympics . He ended his international career with the Izvestia Cup in 1985 at the same tournament with which it began. On December 21, 1985, he played his last international match against Czechoslovakia.

For the national team, he scored a total of 42 goals in 103 international matches. In 1981 he was named the Honored Master of Sports of the USSR . In addition, in 1981 he received the Decoration of Honor of the Soviet Union and in 1984 the Order of Friendship of Nations .

As a trainer

RussiaRussia  Sergei Shepelev
Coaching stations
1988-1991 Jūjō Papaer Kushiro IHC
2001-2005 HK Spartak Moscow
2006-2007 SKA Saint Petersburg
2007-2008 Awtomobilist Ekaterinburg
2008-2013 HK Ugra Khanty-Mansiysk
2014-2015 Admiral Vladivostok
2015 Amur Khabarovsk
Shepelev's jersey is pulled under the hall roof.

Between 1988 and 1998 Sergei Schepelew worked as an ice hockey coach in Japan, first until 1991 at Jūjō Papaer Kushiro IHC , then as a junior coach at a sports school in Obihiro .

In the 2000/01 season he was an assistant coach at HK Spartak Moscow and also looked after the veteran team of the national ice hockey team. Between 2002 and 2005 he was head coach of Spartak Moscow and rose in 2004 with Spartak from the Wysschaja Liga to the Superliga . In the 2006/07 season he was a member of the coaching staff of SKA Saint Petersburg . In the following season he was head coach of the Awtomobilist Yekaterinburg before he was fired in February 2008.

From 2008 Shepelev was the head coach at HK Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk . He led the club in 2009 and 2010 to the championship of the second-rate Wysschaja Liga, whereupon the team was accepted into the Continental Hockey League for the 2010/11 season .

At the end of October 2013, Shepelev resigned together with his assistants after a series of defeats and was replaced by Oleg Davydov . From November 2014, Shepelev was head coach at Admiral Vladivostok and succeeded the previously dismissed Dušan Gregor .

From May 2015 until his release in December of the same year, Shepelev was the head coach of Amur Khabarovsk .

As part of the celebrations for the tenth anniversary of HK Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk, Shepelev's jersey was pulled under the roof of the Yugra Arena on March 25, 2017 as a token of recognition for his services to the club .

Achievements and Awards

International

Orders and honors

Career statistics

Club competitions

season team league Sp T V Pt SM
1973/74 Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk Pervaya League 10
1974/75 SKA Sverdlovsk Pervaya League 20th
1975/76 SKA Sverdlovsk Pervaya League 25th
1976/77 Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk Pervaya League 29
1977/78 Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk Vysschaya League 34 20th 7th 27 13
1978/79 Avtomobilist Sverdlovsk Vysschaya League 48 24 17th 41 30th
1979/80 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 37 10 8th 18th 12
1980/81 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 49 28 20th 48 22nd
1981/82 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 40 17th 17th 34 20th
1982/83 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 41 18th 10 28 20th
1983/84 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 44 21st 21st 42 25th
1984/85 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 46 21st 16 37 24
1985/86 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 38 12 16 28 31
1986/87 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 40 10 12 22nd 24
1987/88 Spartak Moscow Vysschaya League 40 11 15th 26th 22nd

International

year team event Sp T V Pt SM result
1981 USSR WM 8th 6th 2 8th 4th gold medal
1981 USSR Canada Cup 7th 6th 2 8th 4th 1st place
1982 USSR WM 10 6th 2 8th 6th gold medal
1983 USSR WM 10 2 4th 6th 6th gold medal
1984 USSR Olympia 7th 2 4th 6th 0 gold medal
1984 USSR Canada Cup 5 0 3 3 0 3rd place

( 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 )

Coach statistics

team season Main round Play-offs
Sp S. OTS U OTN N Pt result S. N result
Spartak Super League 2002/03 32 11 1 3 2 15th 40 15th place - - lost
Vyszhaya League 2003/04 60 53 1 4th 0 2 165 1st place west 9 4th Runner-up
Super League 2004/05 60 10 0 10 2 38 42 15th place - - lost
Awtomobilist Vysschaya League 2007/08 - dismiss - - -
Ugra Vyszhaya League 2008/09 54 34 6th - 5 9 119 2nd place east 12 4th master
Vysschaya League 2009/10 42 30th 3 - 4th 5 100 1st place east 12 5 master
KHL 2010/11 54 22nd 6th - 9 17th 87 5th place east 2 4th Round of 16
KHL 2011/12 54 19th 10 - 6th 19th 83 8th place east 1 4th Round of 16
KHL 2012/13 52 19th 7th - 3 23 74 9th place east - - lost
KHL 2013/14 22nd 8th 0 - 1 13 25th dismiss - - -

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Profile - Sergei Schepelew ( Memento of the original from December 10, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. sverdlovskhockey.ru @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sverdlovskhockey.ru
  2. a b The Sergei Shepelev experiment was a short lived one . International Hockey Legends @ blogspot.de
  3. Profile - Sergei Shepelev r-hockey.ru
  4. eishockeynews.de, Two coaches have lost their jobs - KHL: Sergei Shepelev and Vladimir Krikunov removed from their posts . ( Memento of the original from December 1, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. Ice Hockey News , October 31, 2013 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.eishockeynews.de
  5. inform.kz
  6. Шепелев займет должность главного тренера «Амура» . In: gazeta.ru . May 29, 2015.
  7. Natalja Akst: 5000 Jugrers celebrate the anniversary of the Jugra hockey club. . In: Ugra TV . March 27, 2017.