Sinetula Chaidarowitsch Biljaletdinow

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Soviet UnionSoviet Union  Sinetula Biljaletdinow Ice hockey player
Sinetula Biljaletdinow
Date of birth March 13, 1955
place of birth Moscow , Russian SFSR
Nickname Sascha, Bill
size 181 cm
Weight 86 kg
position defender
Shot hand Left
Career stations
1973-1991 Dynamo Moscow

Sinetula Chaidarowitsch Biljaletdinow ( Russian Зинетула Хайдарович Билялетдинов ; born March 13, 1955 in Moscow , Russian SFSR ) is a former Soviet - Russian ice hockey player and current - coach of Tatar origin. Between 2014 and 2019 he was again in charge of Ak Bars Kazan from the Continental Hockey League .

Career

As a player at Dynamo Moscow

Sinetula Bilyaletdinov played for Dynamo Moscow throughout his playing career . During the 1973/74 season he made his debut for the club's men's team in the Vysschaya League , the then top division of the Soviet Union. From the following season he was a permanent member of the club's squad, with which he was a total of seven times Soviet runner-up (1977–1980, 1985–1987). He also won the Soviet cup competition with Dynamo in 1976 . In 1988 he temporarily ended his career before he let his career end between 1989 and 1991 with the second team of Dynamo in the second division, the Perwaja Liga . He acted as a player-coach.

In total, he scored 63 goals in 588 games in the Wysschaya League.

Biljaletdinow finished his studies in 1979 at the Central Institute for Physical Culture and Sport in Moscow and in 1982 at the Moscow Regional Pedagogical Institute, Faculty of Physical Education.

International

Sinetula Biljaletdinow represented his home country for the first time at the U19 European Junior Championships in 1974 , which won the silver medal. This was followed by participation in the U20 Junior World Championships in 1974 and 1975 , in which he was each world champion with the Soviet U20 selection .

On August 20, 1976 Biljaletdinow was in a game against Sweden for the first time for the men's national team (Sbornaja) on the ice. His first major tournament was the Canada Cup 1976 , in which the Sbornaja took third place. His first major success in the men's field was winning the 1978 world championship , which was repeated in 1979 . In 1980 he took part with the national team at the Olympic Winter Games in Lake Placid , where the successful Sbornaja only won the silver medal due to the Miracle on Ice .

In the following years Biljaletdinow took part in other world championships and won the gold medal again in 1981 , 1982 , 1983 , 1985 and 1986 . He also took part in the Canada Cup in 1981 and 1984 .

His international career was crowned with a gold medal at the 1984 Winter Olympics . He completed his last world championship in 1987 , where he won the silver medal. On February 2, 1988, he played his last international match.

For the Soviet national team, he scored a total of 21 goals in 244 international matches.

As a trainer

RussiaRussia  Sinetula Biljaletdinow
Sinetula Biljaletdinow
Coaching stations
1988-1993 Dynamo Moscow (Ass.)
1993-1995 Winnipeg Jets (Ass.)
1993-1995 Springfield Falcons (Ass.)
1996-1997 Phoenix Coyotes (Ass.)
1997-2000 Dynamo Moscow
1998 Soot. National team (Ass.)
2000 Soot. National team (Ass.)
2001 HC Lugano
2002-2004 Dynamo Moscow
2002 Soot. National team (Ass.)
2004 Soot. National team
2005-2011 Ak Bars Kazan
2011-2014 Soot. National team
2014-2019 Ak Bars Kazan

Biljaletdinow began his coaching career in 1988 as an assistant coach to Yuri Moissejew at Dynamo Moscow and held this post until 1992. during this time Dynamo Moscow won three championships. Between 1993 and 1997 he was an assistant coach in the Winnipeg Jets franchise , which moved to Phoenix, Arizona in 1996 and was renamed Phoenix Coyotes . This made him the first Russian coach in the National Hockey League and learned a lot about North American training doctrine and practices during this time. In 1997 he returned to Russia and became head coach at Dynamo Moscow. Under his leadership, the team became runner-up in 1999 and Russian champions in 2000 . In addition, the team took second place in the European Hockey League twice during this time . In May 2001 he decided on a contract offer from HC Lugano from the Swiss National League A , but was dismissed in December 2011 after three defeats in a row. In February 2002 he was again appointed head coach of Dynamo Moscow and reached the playoff quarter-finals with the team. In the following two years, the season was also ended in the quarter-finals, so that he then received no new contract.

In addition to his work as a club coach, Biljaletdinow regularly supported the Russian ice hockey association at major tournaments. He was the assistant coach of the Russian national team at the World Championships in 1998 , 1999 , 2000 and at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano and the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City . He won the Olympic silver medal in 1998 and the bronze medal in 2002.

Biljaletdinow at the 2012 World Cup (right)

After the 2004 World Cup, Biljaletdinow took over the position of responsible national coach of the Russian national team for the first time and prepared it for the 2004 World Cup of Hockey , in which the Russians lost to the US national team in the quarter-finals. On September 30, 2004 he was appointed head coach of Ak Bars Kazan , with whom he won the Russian championship in 2006 and the IIHF European Champions Cup in 2007 . In 2009 he led his team to win the Gagarin Cup for the first time, which was introduced when the Continental Hockey League was founded . A year later, at the end of the 2009/2010 season , Ak Bars again won the Gagarin Cup, combined with the Russian championship. With a total of four Russian championship titles, he was the record holder of coaches in the top Russian league.

In June 2011 Bilyaletdinov was introduced as the head coach of the Russian national team, replacing Vyacheslav Bykov , whose contract was not renewed after the 2011 World Cup . With the Sbornaja, he won the gold medal at the World Cup in May 2012 after winning all ten games of the tournament. At the 2013 World Cup , the Russian team did not reach the semi-finals for the first time in six years, as they lost 3-8 to the US national team in the quarter-finals.

Biljaletdinov also led the national team at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi . Due to the unconvincing style of play and the elimination of the national team in the Olympic quarter-finals, he resigned on March 5, 2014, shortly after the Winter Games, and was replaced by Oleg Snarok .

In March 2014, Biljaletdinov took over the position of Vice President and General Manager at Ak Bars Kazan. For the 2014/15 season he was again head coach of Ak Bars and completed his 800th game as a coach in the top Russian league in October 2014. Under his leadership, Ak Bars reached the Gagarin Cup final again in 2015 , where they lost 4-1 to SKA Saint Petersburg .

In March 2017 he reached the milestone of 1,000 games as the fifth Russian coach and in October 2018 he completed his 1,1000 game as a coach. On April 22, 2018, Ak Bars won the Gagarin Cup for the third time when his team beat HK CSKA Moscow 4-1 in the final series. Ak Bars was the record winner of the championship cup with three wins. A year later, Biljaletdinow resigned from his position as head coach after Ak Bars was eliminated in the play-off knockout round.

Private

family

Biljaletdinow comes from a working class family of Tatar origin, who have their roots in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast . His father Chaidar Biljaletdinow (1928-1999) was a worker in a shoe factory. His mother Njaima Biljaletdinowa (1926–2000) was first a worker in a textile factory and then a cleaner at the well-known Moscow pastry shop "Red October".

Sinetula Biljaletdinow is married to Nadezhda Viktorovna, an engineer. The couple has an adult daughter named Natalja (* 1978). She is married to the former ice hockey player Stanislaw Romanow and has two children with him.

Others

Sinetula Biljaletdinow holds the military rank of "Colonel of the Reserve".

Achievements and Awards

  • seven-time Soviet runner-up 1977–1980, 1985–1987
  • Soviet cup winner 1976

International

As a trainer

Honored by Vladimir Putin after winning the gold medal at the 2012 World Cup

Honors and medals

Career statistics

season team league Sp T V Pt SM
1973/74 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 22nd 0 1 1 2
1974/75 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 36 2 1 3 6th
1975/76 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 34 1 2 3 13
1976/77 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 33 1 4th 5 18th
1977/78 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 35 2 3 5 27
1978/79 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 43 6th 4th 10 55
1979/80 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 43 14th 8th 22nd 44
1980/81 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 49 6th 5 11 54
1981/82 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 47 6th 9 15th 28
1982/83 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 42 1 8th 9 20th
1983/84 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 42 2 6th 8th 36
1984/85 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 36 4th 8th 12 24
1985/86 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 40 11 14th 25th 38
1986/87 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 40 6th 5 11 12
1987/88 Dynamo Moscow Vysschaya League 46 1 10 11 20th
1989/90 Dynamo Moscow II Pervaya League 20th 0 2 2 26th
1990/91 Dynamo Moscow II Pervaya League 21st 1 3 4th 4th
Wysschaja League overall 588 63 88 151 397

( 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 )

International

year team event Sp T V Pt SM result
1974 Soviet Union U19 European Championship 5 0 0 0 4th Silver medal blank.svg Silver medal
1974 Soviet Union U20 World Cup 5 1 0 1 5 Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1975 Soviet Union U20 World Cup 2 0 2 Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1976 Soviet Union Canada Cup 5 0 1 1 4th Bronze medal blank.svg Bronze medal
1978 Soviet Union WM 10 0 0 0 17th Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1979 Soviet Union WM 8th 3 4th 7th 2 Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1980 Soviet Union Olympia 7th 1 3 4th 2 Silver medal.svg Silver medal
1981 Soviet Union Canada Cup 7th 0 1 1 8th Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1981 Soviet Union WM 8th 1 2 3 2 Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1982 Soviet Union WM 9 2 1 3 14th Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1983 Soviet Union WM 7th 0 3 3 10 Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1984 Soviet Union Olympia 7th 1 1 2 0 Gold medal.svg gold medal
1984 Soviet Union Canada Cup 0 0 0 Bronze medal blank.svg Bronze medal
1985 Soviet Union WM 10 0 0 0 14th Bronze medal blank.svg Bronze medal
1986 Soviet Union WM 8th 0 1 1 14th Gold medal blank.svg gold medal
1987 Soviet Union WM 3 0 2 2 4th Silver medal blank.svg Silver medal

As head coach

Main round Play-offs
team League / tournament Sp S. OTS U OTN N Pt placement S. N result
HK Dynamo Moscow Super League 1997/98 46 30th - 6th - 10 66 5th place - - no play-offs played
Super League 1998/99 42 26th - 11 - 5 63 3rd place 11 5 Runner-up
Super League 1999/00 38 26th 0 4th 2 6th 84 1st place 13 4th master
Super League 2000/01 dismiss - - -
HC Lugano NLA 2001/02 dismiss - - -
HK Dynamo Moscow Super League 2001/02 7th place 0 3 Defeat in the quarterfinals
Super League 2002/03 51 22nd 3 11 1 14th 84 7th place 2 3 Defeat in the quarterfinals
Super League 2003/04 60 28 2 12 1 17th 101 6th place 0 3 Defeat in the quarterfinals
Russian national team World Cup 2004 3 2 0 0 0 1 4th 2nd place 0 1 Defeat in the quarterfinals
Ak Bars Kazan Super League 2004/05 49 28 3 5 1 12 96 4th Place 1 3 Defeat in the quarterfinals
Super League 2005/06 51 25th 5 9 4th 8th 98 2nd place 12 1 master
Super League 2006/07 54 35 3 7th 1 8th 119 1st place 11 5 Runner-up
Super League 2007/08 57 28 5 - 5 19th 99 7th place 7th 3 Loss in the semifinals
KHL 2008/09 56 36 4th - 6th 10 122 2nd place 14th 8th Gagarin Cup
KHL 2009/10 56 25th 8th - 5 18th 96 3rd place Eastern Conference 15th 7th Gagarin Cup
KHL 2010/11 54 29 5 - 8th 12 105 2nd place Eastern Conference 5 4th Defeat in the quarterfinals
Russian national team World Cup 2012 7th 7th 0 - 0 0 21st 1st place 3 0 World Champion
World Cup 2013 7th 5 0 - 0 2 15th 2nd place 0 1 Defeat in the quarterfinals
Olympia 2014 4th 2 1 - 1 0 9 2nd place 0 1 Defeat in the quarterfinals
Ak Bars Kazan KHL 2014/15 60 34 6th - 6th 14th 120 1st place Eastern Conference 13 7th Runner-up
KHL 2015/16 60 25th 6th - 9 20th 96 5th place Eastern Conference 3 4th Defeat in the round of 16
KHL 2016/17 60 29 9 - 4th 18th 109 3rd place Eastern Conference 8th 7th Loss in the semifinals
KHL 2017/18 56 30th 2 - 6th 18th 100 1st place Eastern Conference 16 3 Gagarin Cup
KHL 2018/19 62 34 4th - 6th 18th 82 5th place Eastern Conference 16 3 Defeat in the round of 16

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Zinetula Bilyaletdinov: From assistant to champion coach. In: khl.ru. April 18, 2019, accessed May 21, 2019 .
  2. Biljaletdinow new Lugano trainer. In: hockeyfans.ch. May 25, 2001, accessed May 16, 2019 .
  3. ^ Ice hockey: Lugano coach sacked. In: swissinfo.ch. December 6, 2001, accessed May 16, 2019 .
  4. СТАТИСТИКА ИГРОКОВ СБОРНОЙ РОССИИ - ЧЕМПИОНАТ МИРА - 1998. In: hockeyarchives.ru. September 7, 2011, Retrieved May 16, 2019 (Russian).
  5. СТАТИСТИКА ИГРОКОВ СБОРНОЙ РОССИИ - ЧЕМПИОНАТ МИРА - 1999. In: hockeyarchives.ru. Retrieved May 16, 2019 (Russian).
  6. a b Coach Bill lays down the law. In: webarchive.iihf.com. June 28, 2011, accessed May 16, 2019 .
  7. Bilyaletdinov is the new head coach of the Russian national team. Russian Ice Hockey Federation, archived from the original on September 4, 2012 ; accessed on June 21, 2011 .
  8. Russia ice hockey coach Zinetula Bilyaletdinov out after Olympic failure. In: espn.com. Retrieved May 16, 2019 .
  9. Davide tuniz: Zinetula Bilyaletdinov back as coach of Ak Bars. In: eurohockey.com. July 14, 2014, accessed May 16, 2019 .
  10. Daniel: Kazan: Back to old strength. In: khlblog.de. January 13, 2015, accessed May 21, 2019 .
  11. coach Bill's 800th game. October 5 round-up. In: en.khl.ru. October 5, 2014, accessed May 16, 2019 .
  12. Bilyaletdinov's 1000 games and Ilya Kovalchuk's 150 goals. In: en.khl.ru. March 7, 2017. Retrieved May 17, 2019 .
  13. Bilyaletdinov celebrates a milestone. October 13 round-up. In: en.khl.ru. October 13, 2018, accessed May 17, 2019 .
  14. Ivan Kostjajew: Билялетдинов ушел из "Ак Барса". В это невозможно поверить! In: sovsport.ru. April 12, 2019, Retrieved May 21, 2019 (Russian).
  15. http://www.kp.ru/daily/24445/610688/
  16. Зинэтула Хайдарович Билялетдинов- главный тренер! тренер. In: dynamo-history.ru. Retrieved May 16, 2019 .