Russian Hockey Second League: Difference between revisions
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*[[1998-99 Vtoraya Liga season|1999]]: Titan Klin (Central), RTI Yekaterinburg (Ural-Western Siberia) | *[[1998-99 Vtoraya Liga season|1999]]: Titan Klin (Central), RTI Yekaterinburg (Ural-Western Siberia) | ||
*[[1999-2000 Vtoraya Liga season|2000]]: Titan Klin (Central), RTI Yekaterinburg (Ural-Western Siberia) | *[[1999-2000 Vtoraya Liga season|2000]]: Titan Klin (Central), RTI Yekaterinburg (Ural-Western Siberia) | ||
*[[2000-01 Vtoraya Liga season|2001]]: Titan Klin (Central | *[[2000-01 Vtoraya Liga season|2001]]: Titan Klin (Central), Steel Asha (Ural-Western Siberia) | ||
*[[2001-02 Vtoraya Liga season|2002]]: Rusisch-EXIM Vladimir (Central), SKiK Trehgornyi (Ural-Western Siberia) | *[[2001-02 Vtoraya Liga season|2002]]: Rusisch-EXIM Vladimir (Central), SKiK Trehgornyi (Ural-Western Siberia) | ||
*[[2002-03 Vtoraya Liga season|2003]]: HC Sarov (Central), Steel Asha (Ural-Western Siberia) | *[[2002-03 Vtoraya Liga season|2003]]: HC Sarov (Central), Steel Asha (Ural-Western Siberia) |
Revision as of 15:28, 5 January 2017
The Second League (Russian:Вторая лига, translit. Vtoraya Liga, also seen as RUS-4) was an ice hockey league in Russia. It was a fourth level league in the Russian ice hockey and it was divided into a two Divisions.
Teams
Team during the 2008-2009 Season.[1]
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Champions
- 1997: Tekhnolog Ukhta
- 1998: Vityaz Chekhov-Podolsk
- 1999: Titan Klin (Central), RTI Yekaterinburg (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2000: Titan Klin (Central), RTI Yekaterinburg (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2001: Titan Klin (Central), Steel Asha (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2002: Rusisch-EXIM Vladimir (Central), SKiK Trehgornyi (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2003: HC Sarov (Central), Steel Asha (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2004: HC Vladimir (Central), Polytekhnik Chelyabinsk (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2005: HC Ryazan (Central), Vagonostroitel Ust-Katav (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2006: HC Ryazan (Central), Slavtek Nizhnevartovsk (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2007: HC MVD Podolsk 2 (Central), Steel Asha (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2008: Sokol Lipetsk (Central), Steel Asha (Ural-Western Siberia)
- 2009: HC Vladimir (Central), Vagonostroitel Ust-Katav (Ural-Western Siberia)
References
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