Lokomotiv Yaroslavl

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Lokomotiv Yaroslavl
Локомотив Ярославль
Lokomotiv Yaroslavl Logo.png
Full name

Lokomotiv Yaroslavl 2000–present

  • Torpedo Yaroslavl 1965–2000
  • Motor Yaroslavl 1964–1965
  • Trud Yaroslavl 1963–1964
  • YaMZ Yaroslavl 1959–1963
Nickname(s) "Loko", "Railwaymen"
Founded 1959
Based In Yaroslavl, Russia
Arena Arena 2000
(Capacity: 10,000)
League

KHL 2008–2011, 2012–present

Division Tarasov
Conference Western
Team Colors               
KHL-Uniform-LOKO
Owner(s) Flag of Russia Russian Railways
Affiliates Molot-Prikamye Perm (VHL)
Loko (MHL)
Website hclokomotiv.ru

main

Hockey Club Lokomotiv (Russian: ХК Локомотив, English: Locomotive HC), also known as Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, is a Russian professional ice hockey team, based in the city of Yaroslavl, playing in the top level Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). The name of the team is derived from its owner, Russian Railways, the national railroad operator.

On 7 September 2011, a plane carrying the team to a game in Minsk crashed shortly after takeoff, killing all of the team's roster (except forward Maxim Zyuzyakin, who was not on the flight), all coaching staff (except goaltending coach Jorma Valtonen, not on the flight) and four players from the Loko 9 juniors squad of the Minor Hockey League (MHL)[1] The tragedy forced Lokomotiv Yaroslavl to cancel their participation in the 2011–12 KHL season.[2]

History

The team has been known previously by several different names:

  • YaMZ Yaroslavl (1959–1963)
  • Trud Yaroslavl (1963–1964)
  • Motor Yaroslavl (1964–1965)
  • Torpedo Yaroslavl (1965–2000)
  • Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (2000–present)

The team generally played in the Second League of the Class "A" group during the Soviet era, being promoted to the First League of Class "A" for the 1983–84 season. Known as Torpedo Yaroslavl at that time, the team enjoyed moderate success under head coach Sergei Alekseyevich Nikolaev. Never a powerful club during the Soviet era, the team became a consistent winner with the creation of the Russian Superleague (RSL) following the collapse of the Soviet Union, winning their first RSL championship in 1997 under coach Petr Vorobiev. The club moved from Avtodizel Arena to the new Arena 2000 early in the 2001–02 season, and won consecutive league championships in 2002 and 2003 under Czech head coach Vladimír Vujtek, Sr. Vujtek left the club after the 2002–03 season for a lucrative contract offer from rival Ak Bars Kazan. Lokomotiv have not been able to replicate their success since that time, but remained a perennial contender in the RSL and the later KHL.

2011 plane crash

Main article: 2011 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl air disaster

On 7 September 2011, the Lokomotiv club was to travel to Minsk for their first game of the 2011–12 KHL season when the airplane they were in crashed in a botched take-off from [unoshna Airport.[3] Of the 45 passengers and crew on board, only flight engineer Alexander Sizov and 26-year-old Lokomotiv forward Alexander Galimov survived the initial crash.[4] Galimov, who had been with the team since 2004, was conscious and had burns to 90 percent of his body, but died five days later in a hospital in Moscow.[5]

Prior to the crash, the team played nine pre-season games, finishing with a 7–2 record. On 3 September, in Lokomotiv's last pre-season game, at home against Torpedo, Galimov scored the team's last pre-crash goal in their 5-2 victory.

In the aftermaths of the crash, KHL president Alexander Medvedev announced that a disaster draft would be held to allow Lokomotiv Yaroslavl to ice a team for the 2011-2012 season.[6] However, on 10 September 2011, the team announced its intention not to participate in the 2011-2012 KHL season, opting to play in the Russian Major League (VHL) for one season before returning to the KHL.[7] Former coach Petr Vorobiev returned to the team as its head coach for the VHL season.

This is the second plane accident in Russia involving a hockey team; in 1950, the entire VVS Moscow team were killed in an air disaster near Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg).[8]


Honors

Champions

1 Russian Superleague (3): 1997, 2002, 2003

Runners-up

1 Gagarin Cup (2): 2009, 2024
1 Gagarin Cup (3): 2010, 2014, 2017
1 Russian Superleague (1): 2008
1 Russian Superleague (3): 1998, 1999, 2005
1 IIHF Continental Cup (1): 2003
1 Spengler Cup (1): 2003

Season-by-season record

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime/Shootout Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Top Scorer Playoffs
2008–09 56 32 13 3 111 174 111 1st, Kharlamov Alexei Yashin (47 points: 21 G, 26 A; 56 GP) Lost in Finals, 4-3 (Ak Bars Kazan)
2009–10 56 26 17 4 96 163 132 3rd, Tarasov Josef Vašíček (48 points: 21 G, 27 A; 56 GP) Lost in Conference Finals, 4–3 (HC MVD)
2010–11 54 33 14 1 108 202 143 1st, Tarasov Pavol Demitra (60 points: 18 G, 42 A; 54 GP) Lost in Conference Finals, 2–4 (Atlant Moscow Oblast)
2011–12 22 13 6 1 42 68 47 3rd, Western Oleg Yashin (15 points: 9 G, 6 A; 22 GP) Lost in Conference Semifinals, 2-3 (Dizel Penza)
2012–13 52 24 18 0 92 131 121 2nd, Tarasov Sergei Plotnikov (33 points: 15 G, 18 A; 55 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Severstal Cherepovets)
2013–14 54 28 21 5 84 109 103 3rd, Tarasov Sergei Plotnikov (35 points: 15 G, 20 A; 53 GP) Lost in Conference Finals, 1–4 (Lev Praha)
2014–15 60 32 19 9 97 155 143 3rd, Tarasov Yegor Averin (37 points: 16 G, 21 A; 59 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Dynamo Moscow)
2015–16 60 43 15 2 125 155 94 2nd, Tarasov Daniil Apalkov (43 points: 16 G, 27 A; 59 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 1–4 (SKA Saint Petersburg)
2016–17 60 36 18 6 110 163 130 3rd, Tarasov Brandon Kozun (56 points: 23 G, 33 A; 59 GP) Lost in Conference Finals, 0–4 (SKA Saint Petersburg)
2017–18 56 35 18 3 99 148 129 2nd, Tarasov Staffan Kronwall (35 points: 10 G, 25 A; 55 GP) Lost in Conference Semifinals, 1–4 (SKA Saint Petersburg)
2018–19 62 40 16 6 86 159 118 2nd, Tarasov Brandon Kozun (41 points: 19 G, 22 A; 52 GP) Lost in Conference Semifinals, 1–4 (SKA Saint Petersburg)
2019–20 62 34 23 5 73 170 151 2nd, Tarasov Denis Alexeyev (37 points: 6 G, 31 A; 57 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Jokerit)
2020–21 60 38 15 7 83 181 126 3rd, Tarasov Pavel Kraskovsky (38 points: 17 G, 21 A; 56 GP) Lost in Conference Semifinals, 3–4 (CSKA Moscow)
2021–22 47 23 15 9 55 113 103 4th, Tarasov Reid Boucher (27 points: 12 G, 15 A; 46 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 0–4 (CSKA Moscow)
2022–23 68 41 17 10 92 164 122 2nd, Tarasov Maxim Shalunov (42 points: 29 G, 13 A; 62 GP) Lost in Conference Semifinals, 3–4 (CSKA Moscow)
2023–24 68 44 19 5 93 174 139 2nd, Tarasov Maxim Shalunov (36 points: 17 G, 19 A; 68 GP) Lost in Gagarin Cup Finals, 0–4 (Metallurg Magnitogorsk)

References

External links

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