Vadim Sergejewitsch Jepantschinzew

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RussiaRussia  Vadim Jepantschinzew Ice hockey player
Vadim Jepantschinzew
Date of birth March 16, 1976
place of birth Orsk , Russian SFSR
size 180 cm
Weight 92 kg
position center
number # 9
Shot hand Left
Draft
NHL Entry Draft 1994 , 3rd round, 55th position
Tampa Bay Lightning
Career stations
until 1993 Yuzhny Ural Orsk
1993-1997 HK Spartak Moscow
1997-1998 Cleveland Lumberjacks
Hampton Roads Admirals
1998-2000 Metallurg Novokuznetsk
2000-2003 Severstal Cherepovets
2003-2005 Ak Bars Kazan
2005-2006 Chimik Moskovskaya Oblast
2006-2009 HK CSKA Moscow
2009-2010 HK Dynamo Moscow
Atlant Mytishchi
2010 Neftechimik Nizhnekamsk
2010-2011 Atlant Mytishchi
RussiaRussia  Vadim Jepantschinzew
Coaching stations
2011 HK Spartak Moscow (Ass.)
2012-2013 Mytishchinsky Atlanty
2013-2014 MHK Spartak
2015-2017 Saryarka Karaganda
2017-2018 HK Spartak Moscow

Vadim Sergejewitsch Jepantschinzew ( Russian Вадим Сергеевич Епанчинцев ; born March 16, 1976 in Orsk , Russian SFSR ) is a former Russian ice hockey player , who was the last head coach of the HK Spartak Moscow .

Career

As a player

Vadim Jepantschinzew began his career as a hockey player in his hometown in the youth department of Yuzhny Ural Orsk , for whose professional team he made his debut in the 1992/93 season in the second Russian division. The center then played for the HK Spartak Moscow for four years - first in the International Hockey League and in the 1996/97 season in its successor, the Super League . The Russian spent the 1997/98 season in North America, where he was active for the Cleveland Lumberjacks in the International Hockey League and the Hampton Roads Admirals in the ECHL .

From 1998 to 2000 Jepantschinzew was under contract with Metallurg Novokuznetsk in the super league. In the following years, the former junior international was able to establish himself as a regular player in the Superliga and played for Severstal Tscherepowez , Ak Bars Kazan and Chimik Moskowskaja Oblast until 2006 . In the 2003/04 season he was the leader of the league as a player for Ak Bars Kazan with a plus / minus balance of +29. From 2006 to 2009 he was under contract for the capital club HK CSKA Moscow , with whom he initially took part in the game operations of the Super League and in the 2008/09 season in the newly founded Continental Hockey League .

The 2009/10 season began Jepantschinzew at HK Dynamo Moscow . He left this after 36 appearances in which he had scored two goals and provided eleven assists in January 2010 and signed a contract with his ex-club from Mytishchi, which in 2008 changed its name from Chimik Moskowskaya Oblast to Atlant Mytishchi. The following season he began with KHL competitor Neftechimik Nizhnekamsk , but returned to Atlant Mytishchi in September 2010 after only two games. There he ended his career in April 2011.

International

For Russia , Jepantschinzew took part in the junior division of the U18 European Junior Championship in 1994 , as well as the Junior World Championship in 1995 and 1996 . In the first two tournaments he won the silver medal with his teams; In 1996 Jepantschinzew was also allowed to decorate himself with the bronze medal.

As a trainer

After retiring, he was assistant coach at Spartak Moscow until December 2011, before returning to Atlant in January 2012 and serving on the coaching staff of the Atlanty junior team until 2013 . From January 2013 he was assistant coach at MHK Spartak , the junior team of Spartak Moscow, before he was promoted to head coach of the team in October 2014.

Between 2015 and 2017 he worked at HK Saryarka Karaganda in Kazakhstan , initially again as an assistant coach and from September 2016 as head coach.

From April 2017 he was head coach of the professional team of Spartak Moscow in the KHL and reached the play-offs with Spartak for the first time in several years. After a mixed start to the 2018/19 season with only 8 wins from 19 games, he was released on October 19, 2018.

Achievements and Awards

International

KHL statistics

Seasons Games Gates Assists Points Penalty minutes
Main round 3 118 15th 60 75 98
Playoffs 3 18th 0 5 5 16

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Вадим Епанчинцев, назначенный на пост главного тренера ХК "Спартак" (Москва). In: rsport.ru. March 24, 2017, accessed May 31, 2017 .
  2. Епанчинцев покинул пост главного тренера "Спартака", сообщил источник. In: rsport.ria.ru. October 19, 2018, accessed October 22, 2018 .