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Traktor Chelyabinsk

Traktor Chelyabinsk, also known as Traktor (Russian: Трактор), is a professional ice hockey team based in Chelyabinsk, Russia. They are members of the Kharlamov Division of the Eastern Conference of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). From 1967 to 2009 the team played their home games at the Yunost Sport Palace. In 2009 the team moved to the arena now called Traktor Ice Arena named after Valery Belousov, their present home arena in Chelyabinsk.

Traktor Chelyabinsk
CityChelyabinsk
LeagueKHL
2008–present
ConferenceEastern
DivisionKharlamov
Founded1947
Home arenaTraktor Ice Arena
(capacity: 7,500)
Colours   
General managerIvan Savin
Head coachAlexei Zavarukhin
CaptainSergey Kalinin
AffiliatesChelmet Chelyabinsk (VHL)
Belye Medvedi (MHL)
Websitehctraktor.org
Franchise history
1948–1953Dzerzhinets
1954–58Avangard
1958–presentTraktor Chelyabinsk
Current season

History edit

Soviet Championship (1948–1992) edit

Founded in 1947 as a team of the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant, Traktor have played for the Soviet and Russian championships since 1948. In 1948-1953 the team was called Dzerzhinets and Avangard in 1954 - 1958. The current name was adopted starting with the 1958–59 season.[1]

Traktor played its first game in the top league on December 12, 1948 against CDKA Moscow. Viktor Shuvalov, a future star of Moscow clubs VVS and CSKA, led the team in scores during its first season in the championship. In 1955 Chelyabinsk reached the fourth place for the first time (back then a medal table still was dominated by the Moscow teams).[citation needed]

In 1965 - 1968, Traktor played in the second division of the Soviet hockey championships. The team returned to the first division in 1968.[citation needed] In 1973, Traktor played in the USSR Cup finals against the CSKA. Although Traktor led 2-0, they lost the game with a score of 2-5.[citation needed] In the 1976-77 season Traktor won bronze in the Soviet hockey championships, the team's highest achievement during the Soviet period of its history.[citation needed]

At that time, Traktor produced several players who achieved international prominence. One of the best Soviet forwards of all times, Sergei Makarov, was born in Chelyabinsk and began his career in Traktor. Along his teammate, defenseman Sergei Starikov, he regularly played on the Soviet national team from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s. Starikov and Makarov each won over 10 international tournaments with Team USSR.[citation needed]

International League and Russian Superleague years (1992–2008) edit

In the early 1990s, Traktor twice finished third in the International Hockey League under head coach Valery Belousov. A group of Traktor players, including Sergei Gomolyako, Valeri Karpov, Igor Varitsky, Ravil Gusmanov and others, appeared on Team Russia at several world championships.

During the late 1990s ice hockey in Chelyabinsk entered a period of decline. In 1998 Traktor was relegated to the Vysshaya Liga and was replaced in its role as the major hockey team of Chelyabinsk by Mechel. The team found its way back to the elite only in 2006. Coached by Gennady Tsygurov they won the second division championship earning promotion to the Russian Superleague.

After the 2006-07 season, Tsygurov resigned. He was replaced by Andrei Nazarov, a native of Chelyabinsk who had spent 13 seasons in the NHL as an enforcer. Although he succeeded at securing Traktor's place in the top league, Nazarov's coaching style led Traktor to a new world record in overall penalty minutes in a single game that was set after the mass brawl versus Ak Bars Kazan in January 2008.

First seasons in the KHL (2008–2010) edit

During 2008–09 KHL season Traktor was reinforced by its alumni Ravil Gusmanov and NHL star Oleg Kvasha. Despite a good start Chelyabinsk finished the regular season with disappointing results and eventually failed to advance in the playoffs further than the first round losing the series to Atlant Moscow Oblast with an overall score 13-2. Kvasha was named the team's MVP of the season. 2009 was also notable for the club's move to the Arena Traktor. The first game in the new arena, played against Metallurg Magnitogorsk, was won by 3-2. The first player to score a goal was defenceman Andre Lakos.

Before the 2009–10 season the team had to face budget cuts and lose its biggest stars including Oleg Kvasha and Evgenii Dadonov. After an unstable performance in the regular season the team advanced to the playoffs with the lowest seed ultimately losing to its natural rival Metallurg Magnitogorsk in the first round.

Return of Belousov (2010–present) edit

During the 2010 off-season Nazarov left to coach infamous Vityaz Chekhov and was replaced by Andrei Sidorenko who was fired off his job right after the disastrous start of the season. In October 2010 Valery Belousov returned as Traktor's head coach, but, nonetheless, during the 2010–11 the team failed to make the playoffs.

After the lackluster season the team finally fixing its financial issues seriously rearranged the roster with future stars such as Vladimir Antipov, Stanislav Chistov, Jan Bulis, Petri Kontiola and goaltender Michael Garnett. The results were immediate, Traktor became the best team of the 2011–12 regular season winning Continental Cup and taking bronze medals after losing to Avangard Omsk in Eastern Conference Finals. The biggest breakthrough of the season was a young winger Evgeny Kuznetsov who led the team in points. Another homegrown Chelyabinsk player, Konstantin Panov, who returned to Traktor after five seasons of absence, became the team's goal scoring leader.

Traktor kept all of its leaders for the 2012–13 season. Unlike many other clubs in the league Chelyabinsk did not sign any NHL players who were returning to Europe during the NHL lockout. Facing much stronger competition this time Traktor finished the regular season in the third place of the Eastern Conference. Kuznetsov continued his successful career leading the team in points, goals and assists. 17 years old forward Valeri Nichushkin became that season's major breakthrough for Chelyabinsk, later in 2013 he won the Cherepanov Trophy as the KHL's Rookie of the Year and was picked in the top 10 of the NHL Entry Draft by the Dallas Stars.

On its way to the Gagarin Cup Finals Traktor had to endure three seven game series against Barys Astana, Avangard Omsk and Ak Bars Kazan, all three of those rounds were won back by the team from the position of 3-1 down in the series. One of the main components of the success was goaltender Michael Garnett who had 5 shutouts during the post-season and GAA of 1.86. However, the team was less fortunate in the final games played versus the defending champions Dynamo Moscow. Failing to take the lead in the series Traktor ultimately lost it 4-2.

Season-by-season KHL record edit

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, OTW = Overtime/shootout wins, OTL = Overtime/shootout losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Season GP W OTW L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Top Scorer Playoffs
2008–09 56 24 2 22 8 84 142 166 4th, Tarasov Andrei Nikolishin (39 points: 10 G, 29 A; 48 GP) Lost in preliminary round, 0–3 (Atlant Moscow Oblast)
2009–10 56 18 3 31 5 64 137 192 4th, Kharlamov Evgeny Skachkov (36 points: 22 G, 11 A; 51 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 1–3 (Metallurg Magnitogorsk)
2010–11 54 14 8 26 6 64 142 166 5th, Kharlamov Deron Quint (32 points: 21 G, 11 A; 53 GP) Did not qualify
2011–12 54 32 7 11 4 114 163 116 1st, Kharlamov Evgeny Kuznetsov (41 points: 19 G, 22 A; 49 GP) Lost in Conference Finals, 1–4 (Avangard Omsk)
2012–13 52 28 3 13 8 98 152 120 2nd, Kharlamov Evgeny Kuznetsov (44 points: 19 G, 25 A; 51 GP) Lost in Gagarin Cup Finals, 2–4 (Dynamo Moscow)
2013–14 54 18 7 22 7 75 126 148 5th, Kharlamov Petri Kontiola (37 points: 15 G, 22 A; 53 GP) Did not qualify
2014–15 60 21 8 24 7 86 144 154 3rd, Kharlamov Anton Glinkin (38 points: 13 G, 25 A; 54 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Sibir Novosibirsk)
2015–16 60 17 12 23 8 83 132 151 5th, Kharlamov Alexander Rybakov (27 points: 9 G, 18 A; 55 GP) Did not qualify
2016–17 60 27 3 20 10 97 130 120 3rd, Kharlamov Paul Szczechura (41 points: 14 G, 27 A; 60 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Barys Astana)
2017–18 56 26 7 19 4 96 129 121 2nd, Kharlamov Paul Szczechura (42 points: 20 G, 22 A; 55 GP) Lost in Conference Finals, 0–4 (Ak Bars Kazan)
2018–19 62 18 9 31 4 58 102 151 5th, Kharlamov Ryan Stoa (27 points: 11 G, 16 A; 59 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 0–4 (Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg)
2019–20 62 20 5 31 6 56 132 161 6th, Kharlamov Lukáš Sedlák (40 points: 23 G, 17 A; 57 GP) Did not qualify
2020–21 60 27 7 20 6 74 157 143 3rd, Kharlamov Tomáš Hyka (49 points: 14 G, 35 A; 59 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 1–4 (Salavat Yulaev Ufa)
2021–22 49 22 12 12 3 71 152 119 2nd, Kharlamov Lukáš Sedlák (43 points: 18 G, 25 A; 49 GP) Lost in Conference Finals, 1–4 (Metallurg Magnitogorsk)
2022–23 68 23 8 27 10 72 169 190 5th, Kharlamov Anton Burdasov (46 points: 19 G, 27 A; 48 GP) Did not qualify
2023–24 68 27 10 25 6 80 163 157 4th, Kharlamov Maxim Shabanov (50 points: 25 G, 25 A; 64 GP) Lost in Semifinals, 0–4 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)

Players edit

Current roster edit

Updated 7 April 2024.[2]
No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
9   Viktor Antipin D L 31 2023 Ust-Kamenogorsk, Kazakhstan
81   Artyom Blazhiyevsky D L 30 2021 Moscow, Russia
71   Anton Burdasov (A) RW L 32 2022 Chelyabinsk, Russian SFSR
76   Andrei Chibisov LW L 31 2023 Prokopyevsk, Russia
85   Semyon Der-Arguchintsev C R 23 2023 Moscow, Russia
98   Grigori Dronov D L 26 2023 Magnitogorsk, Russia
30   Zach Fucale G L 28 2023 Laval, Quebec, Canada
45   Mikhail Goryunov-Rolgizer F L 21 2020 Chelyabinsk, Russia
40   Sergey Kalinin (C) C L 33 2020 Omsk, Soviet Union
89   Ilya Karpukhin D L 25 2018 Chelyabinsk, Russia
53   Mikhail Kotlyarevsky LW R 26 2022 Chita, Russia
74   Vitali Kravtsov RW L 24 2023 Vladivostok, Russia
20   Sergei Mylnikov G L 24 2020 Chelyabinsk, Russia
44   Ilya Nikolayev D L 22 2023 Chelyabinsk, Russia
11   Egor Popov C L 27 2023 Tyumen, Russia
10   Buddy Robinson RW R 32 2023 Bellmawr, New Jersey, United States
28   Jack Rodewald RW R 30 2023 Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
12   Alexander Rykov RW L 18 2022 Magnitogorsk, Russia
49   Maxim Shabanov F L 23 2021 Chelyabinsk, Russia
24   Alexander Sharov C L 28 2023 Chelyabinsk, Russia
94   Artyom Shchuchinov D L 18 2022 Nizhny Tagil, Russia
16   Alexander Shepelev D L 26 2022 Chelyabinsk, Russia
90   Nikita Soshnikov LW L 30 2022 Nizhny Tagil, Russia
72   Sergei Telegin D L 23 2020 Chelyabinsk, Russia
88   Nikita Tertyshny F R 25 2021 Chelyabinsk, Russia
55   Vladimir Tkachyov (A) F R 30 2021 Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine
33   Albert Yarullin (A) D R 30 2021 Kazan, Russia
50   Danil Yurtaikin LW R 26 2023 Belovo, Russia
25   Vladimir Zharkov (A) RW L 36 2023 Pavlovskiy Posad, Russian SFSR


Head coaches edit

  •   Viktor Vasiliev, 1948–52
  •   Vasily Karelin, 1952–54
  •   Sergei Zakhvatov, 1954–62
  •   Nikolai Sidorenko, 1962–64
  •   Aleksandr Novokreshchenov, 1964
  •   Viktor Stolyarov, 1964–65
  •   Vladislav Smirnov, 1965
  •   Albert Danilov, 1965–66
  •   Viktor Stolyarov, 1968–73
  •   Albert Danilov, 1973–74
  •   Anatoly Kostryukov, 1974–78
  •   Gennadi Tsygurov, 1978–84
  •   Anatoly Shustov, 1984–87
  •   Gennadi Tsygurov, 1987–90
  •   Valery Belousov, 1990–95
  •   Anatoly Kartaev, 1995
  •   Sergei Grigorkin, 1995–99
  •   Anatoly Timofeev, 2000–01
  •   Sergei Paramonov, 2001
  •   Aleksandr Glazkov, 2001–02
  •   Nikolai Makarov, 2002–03
  •   Anatoly Timofeev, 2003–05
  •   Anatoly Bogdanov, 2005
  •   Gennadi Tsygurov, 2005–07
  •   Andrei Nazarov, 2007–10
  •   Andrei Sidorenko, April 2010 - October 2010
  •   Valery Belousov, 2010–2014
  •   Karri Kivi, May 2014 - October 2014
  •   Andrei Nikolishin, October 2014 – November 2015
  •   Anvar Gatiyatulin, November 2015 – April 2018
  •   German Titov, June 2018 – October 2018
  •   Alexei Tertyshny, October 2018 – April 2019
  •   Pēteris Skudra, April 2019 – November 2019
  •   Vladimir Yurzinov, November 2019 – April 2020
  •   Anvar Gatiyatulin, April 2020 –

Honored members edit

Traktor Chelyabinsk hangs on the rafters of the Traktor Arena jerseys of all the Traktor players who have ever won the World Championship title, including the players who are currently active.

Traktor Chelyabinsk honored members
No Player Position Career
1 Sergei Mylnikov G 1976–89
4 Sergei Babinov D 1972–75
7 Dmitri Kalinin D 1995–98
8 Viktor Shuvalov LW 1947–49
9 Igor Varitsky F 1988–95, 2004–05
11 Evgeny Davydov RW 1984–86
12 Sergei Starikov D 1976–79
24 Sergei Makarov RW 1976–78
24 Valeri Karpov RW 1988–95, 2005–06
25 Konstantin Astrakhantsev RW 1988–94
25 Andrei Sapozhnikov D 1990–95, 1997–98
27 Vyacheslav Bykov C 1980–82
28 Alexander Semin RW 2001–02
30 Andrei Zuyev G 1991–99, 2002–04
92 Evgeny Kuznetsov RW 2009–

Franchise records and leaders edit

All-time KHL scoring leaders edit

These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise history. Figures are updated after each completed KHL regular season.[3]

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game   = current Traktor player

Honors edit

Champions edit

  KHL Continental Cup (1): 2012
  Vysshaya Liga Championship (1): 2006

Runners-up edit

  Gagarin Cup (1): 2013
  Gagarin Cup (3): 2012, 2018, 2022
  USSR Cup (1): 1973
  Soviet League Championship: 1977
  IHL Championship (2): 1993, 1994
  Spengler Cup (1): 1973

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-03-25. Retrieved 2014-07-27.
  2. ^ "Traktor Chelyabinsk team roster". eng.hctraktor.org. Retrieved 2024-04-07.
  3. ^ "Traktor Chelyabinsk All-Time KHL leaders". quanthockey.com. 2024-04-07. Retrieved 2024-04-07.

External links edit

  • Official website

traktor, chelyabinsk, also, known, traktor, russian, Трактор, professional, hockey, team, based, chelyabinsk, russia, they, members, kharlamov, division, eastern, conference, kontinental, hockey, league, from, 1967, 2009, team, played, their, home, games, yuno. Traktor Chelyabinsk also known as Traktor Russian Traktor is a professional ice hockey team based in Chelyabinsk Russia They are members of the Kharlamov Division of the Eastern Conference of the Kontinental Hockey League KHL From 1967 to 2009 the team played their home games at the Yunost Sport Palace In 2009 the team moved to the arena now called Traktor Ice Arena named after Valery Belousov their present home arena in Chelyabinsk Traktor ChelyabinskCityChelyabinskLeagueKHL2008 present Russian Superleague1996 1999 2006 2008 Vysshaya Liga1999 2006 IHL 1992 1996 Soviet League Class A1948 1965 1968 1992 Soviet League Class A21965 1968ConferenceEasternDivisionKharlamovFounded1947Home arenaTraktor Ice Arena capacity 7 500 Colours General managerIvan SavinHead coachAlexei ZavarukhinCaptainSergey KalininAffiliatesChelmet Chelyabinsk VHL Belye Medvedi MHL Websitehctraktor wbr orgFranchise history1948 1953Dzerzhinets1954 58Avangard1958 presentTraktor ChelyabinskCurrent season Contents 1 History 1 1 Soviet Championship 1948 1992 1 2 International League and Russian Superleague years 1992 2008 1 3 First seasons in the KHL 2008 2010 1 4 Return of Belousov 2010 present 2 Season by season KHL record 3 Players 3 1 Current roster 3 2 Head coaches 3 3 Honored members 4 Franchise records and leaders 4 1 All time KHL scoring leaders 5 Honors 5 1 Champions 5 2 Runners up 6 References 7 External linksHistory editSoviet Championship 1948 1992 edit Founded in 1947 as a team of the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant Traktor have played for the Soviet and Russian championships since 1948 In 1948 1953 the team was called Dzerzhinets and Avangard in 1954 1958 The current name was adopted starting with the 1958 59 season 1 Traktor played its first game in the top league on December 12 1948 against CDKA Moscow Viktor Shuvalov a future star of Moscow clubs VVS and CSKA led the team in scores during its first season in the championship In 1955 Chelyabinsk reached the fourth place for the first time back then a medal table still was dominated by the Moscow teams citation needed In 1965 1968 Traktor played in the second division of the Soviet hockey championships The team returned to the first division in 1968 citation needed In 1973 Traktor played in the USSR Cup finals against the CSKA Although Traktor led 2 0 they lost the game with a score of 2 5 citation needed In the 1976 77 season Traktor won bronze in the Soviet hockey championships the team s highest achievement during the Soviet period of its history citation needed At that time Traktor produced several players who achieved international prominence One of the best Soviet forwards of all times Sergei Makarov was born in Chelyabinsk and began his career in Traktor Along his teammate defenseman Sergei Starikov he regularly played on the Soviet national team from the late 1970s to the mid 1980s Starikov and Makarov each won over 10 international tournaments with Team USSR citation needed International League and Russian Superleague years 1992 2008 edit In the early 1990s Traktor twice finished third in the International Hockey League under head coach Valery Belousov A group of Traktor players including Sergei Gomolyako Valeri Karpov Igor Varitsky Ravil Gusmanov and others appeared on Team Russia at several world championships During the late 1990s ice hockey in Chelyabinsk entered a period of decline In 1998 Traktor was relegated to the Vysshaya Liga and was replaced in its role as the major hockey team of Chelyabinsk by Mechel The team found its way back to the elite only in 2006 Coached by Gennady Tsygurov they won the second division championship earning promotion to the Russian Superleague After the 2006 07 season Tsygurov resigned He was replaced by Andrei Nazarov a native of Chelyabinsk who had spent 13 seasons in the NHL as an enforcer Although he succeeded at securing Traktor s place in the top league Nazarov s coaching style led Traktor to a new world record in overall penalty minutes in a single game that was set after the mass brawl versus Ak Bars Kazan in January 2008 First seasons in the KHL 2008 2010 edit During 2008 09 KHL season Traktor was reinforced by its alumni Ravil Gusmanov and NHL star Oleg Kvasha Despite a good start Chelyabinsk finished the regular season with disappointing results and eventually failed to advance in the playoffs further than the first round losing the series to Atlant Moscow Oblast with an overall score 13 2 Kvasha was named the team s MVP of the season 2009 was also notable for the club s move to the Arena Traktor The first game in the new arena played against Metallurg Magnitogorsk was won by 3 2 The first player to score a goal was defenceman Andre Lakos Before the 2009 10 season the team had to face budget cuts and lose its biggest stars including Oleg Kvasha and Evgenii Dadonov After an unstable performance in the regular season the team advanced to the playoffs with the lowest seed ultimately losing to its natural rival Metallurg Magnitogorsk in the first round Return of Belousov 2010 present edit During the 2010 off season Nazarov left to coach infamous Vityaz Chekhov and was replaced by Andrei Sidorenko who was fired off his job right after the disastrous start of the season In October 2010 Valery Belousov returned as Traktor s head coach but nonetheless during the 2010 11 the team failed to make the playoffs After the lackluster season the team finally fixing its financial issues seriously rearranged the roster with future stars such as Vladimir Antipov Stanislav Chistov Jan Bulis Petri Kontiola and goaltender Michael Garnett The results were immediate Traktor became the best team of the 2011 12 regular season winning Continental Cup and taking bronze medals after losing to Avangard Omsk in Eastern Conference Finals The biggest breakthrough of the season was a young winger Evgeny Kuznetsov who led the team in points Another homegrown Chelyabinsk player Konstantin Panov who returned to Traktor after five seasons of absence became the team s goal scoring leader Traktor kept all of its leaders for the 2012 13 season Unlike many other clubs in the league Chelyabinsk did not sign any NHL players who were returning to Europe during the NHL lockout Facing much stronger competition this time Traktor finished the regular season in the third place of the Eastern Conference Kuznetsov continued his successful career leading the team in points goals and assists 17 years old forward Valeri Nichushkin became that season s major breakthrough for Chelyabinsk later in 2013 he won the Cherepanov Trophy as the KHL s Rookie of the Year and was picked in the top 10 of the NHL Entry Draft by the Dallas Stars On its way to the Gagarin Cup Finals Traktor had to endure three seven game series against Barys Astana Avangard Omsk and Ak Bars Kazan all three of those rounds were won back by the team from the position of 3 1 down in the series One of the main components of the success was goaltender Michael Garnett who had 5 shutouts during the post season and GAA of 1 86 However the team was less fortunate in the final games played versus the defending champions Dynamo Moscow Failing to take the lead in the series Traktor ultimately lost it 4 2 Season by season KHL record editNote GP Games played W Wins L Losses OTW Overtime shootout wins OTL Overtime shootout losses Pts Points GF Goals for GA Goals against Season GP W OTW L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Top Scorer Playoffs2008 09 56 24 2 22 8 84 142 166 4th Tarasov Andrei Nikolishin 39 points 10 G 29 A 48 GP Lost in preliminary round 0 3 Atlant Moscow Oblast 2009 10 56 18 3 31 5 64 137 192 4th Kharlamov Evgeny Skachkov 36 points 22 G 11 A 51 GP Lost in Conference Quarterfinals 1 3 Metallurg Magnitogorsk 2010 11 54 14 8 26 6 64 142 166 5th Kharlamov Deron Quint 32 points 21 G 11 A 53 GP Did not qualify2011 12 54 32 7 11 4 114 163 116 1st Kharlamov Evgeny Kuznetsov 41 points 19 G 22 A 49 GP Lost in Conference Finals 1 4 Avangard Omsk 2012 13 52 28 3 13 8 98 152 120 2nd Kharlamov Evgeny Kuznetsov 44 points 19 G 25 A 51 GP Lost in Gagarin Cup Finals 2 4 Dynamo Moscow 2013 14 54 18 7 22 7 75 126 148 5th Kharlamov Petri Kontiola 37 points 15 G 22 A 53 GP Did not qualify2014 15 60 21 8 24 7 86 144 154 3rd Kharlamov Anton Glinkin 38 points 13 G 25 A 54 GP Lost in Conference Quarterfinals 2 4 Sibir Novosibirsk 2015 16 60 17 12 23 8 83 132 151 5th Kharlamov Alexander Rybakov 27 points 9 G 18 A 55 GP Did not qualify2016 17 60 27 3 20 10 97 130 120 3rd Kharlamov Paul Szczechura 41 points 14 G 27 A 60 GP Lost in Conference Quarterfinals 2 4 Barys Astana 2017 18 56 26 7 19 4 96 129 121 2nd Kharlamov Paul Szczechura 42 points 20 G 22 A 55 GP Lost in Conference Finals 0 4 Ak Bars Kazan 2018 19 62 18 9 31 4 58 102 151 5th Kharlamov Ryan Stoa 27 points 11 G 16 A 59 GP Lost in Conference Quarterfinals 0 4 Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg 2019 20 62 20 5 31 6 56 132 161 6th Kharlamov Lukas Sedlak 40 points 23 G 17 A 57 GP Did not qualify2020 21 60 27 7 20 6 74 157 143 3rd Kharlamov Tomas Hyka 49 points 14 G 35 A 59 GP Lost in Conference Quarterfinals 1 4 Salavat Yulaev Ufa 2021 22 49 22 12 12 3 71 152 119 2nd Kharlamov Lukas Sedlak 43 points 18 G 25 A 49 GP Lost in Conference Finals 1 4 Metallurg Magnitogorsk 2022 23 68 23 8 27 10 72 169 190 5th Kharlamov Anton Burdasov 46 points 19 G 27 A 48 GP Did not qualify2023 24 68 27 10 25 6 80 163 157 4th Kharlamov Maxim Shabanov 50 points 25 G 25 A 64 GP Lost in Semifinals 0 4 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl Players editCurrent roster edit viewtalkedit Updated 7 April 2024 2 No Nat Player Pos S G Age Acquired Birthplace9 nbsp Viktor Antipin D L 31 2023 Ust Kamenogorsk Kazakhstan81 nbsp Artyom Blazhiyevsky D L 30 2021 Moscow Russia71 nbsp Anton Burdasov A RW L 32 2022 Chelyabinsk Russian SFSR76 nbsp Andrei Chibisov LW L 31 2023 Prokopyevsk Russia85 nbsp Semyon Der Arguchintsev C R 23 2023 Moscow Russia98 nbsp Grigori Dronov D L 26 2023 Magnitogorsk Russia30 nbsp Zach Fucale G L 28 2023 Laval Quebec Canada45 nbsp Mikhail Goryunov Rolgizer F L 21 2020 Chelyabinsk Russia40 nbsp Sergey Kalinin C C L 33 2020 Omsk Soviet Union89 nbsp Ilya Karpukhin D L 25 2018 Chelyabinsk Russia53 nbsp Mikhail Kotlyarevsky LW R 26 2022 Chita Russia74 nbsp Vitali Kravtsov RW L 24 2023 Vladivostok Russia20 nbsp Sergei Mylnikov G L 24 2020 Chelyabinsk Russia44 nbsp Ilya Nikolayev D L 22 2023 Chelyabinsk Russia11 nbsp Egor Popov C L 27 2023 Tyumen Russia10 nbsp Buddy Robinson RW R 32 2023 Bellmawr New Jersey United States28 nbsp Jack Rodewald RW R 30 2023 Winnipeg Manitoba Canada12 nbsp Alexander Rykov RW L 18 2022 Magnitogorsk Russia49 nbsp Maxim Shabanov F L 23 2021 Chelyabinsk Russia24 nbsp Alexander Sharov C L 28 2023 Chelyabinsk Russia94 nbsp Artyom Shchuchinov D L 18 2022 Nizhny Tagil Russia16 nbsp Alexander Shepelev D L 26 2022 Chelyabinsk Russia90 nbsp Nikita Soshnikov LW L 30 2022 Nizhny Tagil Russia72 nbsp Sergei Telegin D L 23 2020 Chelyabinsk Russia88 nbsp Nikita Tertyshny F R 25 2021 Chelyabinsk Russia55 nbsp Vladimir Tkachyov A F R 30 2021 Dnipropetrovsk Ukraine33 nbsp Albert Yarullin A D R 30 2021 Kazan Russia50 nbsp Danil Yurtaikin LW R 26 2023 Belovo Russia25 nbsp Vladimir Zharkov A RW L 36 2023 Pavlovskiy Posad Russian SFSR Head coaches edit nbsp Viktor Vasiliev 1948 52 nbsp Vasily Karelin 1952 54 nbsp Sergei Zakhvatov 1954 62 nbsp Nikolai Sidorenko 1962 64 nbsp Aleksandr Novokreshchenov 1964 nbsp Viktor Stolyarov 1964 65 nbsp Vladislav Smirnov 1965 nbsp Albert Danilov 1965 66 nbsp Viktor Stolyarov 1968 73 nbsp Albert Danilov 1973 74 nbsp Anatoly Kostryukov 1974 78 nbsp Gennadi Tsygurov 1978 84 nbsp Anatoly Shustov 1984 87 nbsp Gennadi Tsygurov 1987 90 nbsp Valery Belousov 1990 95 nbsp Anatoly Kartaev 1995 nbsp Sergei Grigorkin 1995 99 nbsp Anatoly Timofeev 2000 01 nbsp Sergei Paramonov 2001 nbsp Aleksandr Glazkov 2001 02 nbsp Nikolai Makarov 2002 03 nbsp Anatoly Timofeev 2003 05 nbsp Anatoly Bogdanov 2005 nbsp Gennadi Tsygurov 2005 07 nbsp Andrei Nazarov 2007 10 nbsp Andrei Sidorenko April 2010 October 2010 nbsp Valery Belousov 2010 2014 nbsp Karri Kivi May 2014 October 2014 nbsp Andrei Nikolishin October 2014 November 2015 nbsp Anvar Gatiyatulin November 2015 April 2018 nbsp German Titov June 2018 October 2018 nbsp Alexei Tertyshny October 2018 April 2019 nbsp Peteris Skudra April 2019 November 2019 nbsp Vladimir Yurzinov November 2019 April 2020 nbsp Anvar Gatiyatulin April 2020 Honored members edit Traktor Chelyabinsk hangs on the rafters of the Traktor Arena jerseys of all the Traktor players who have ever won the World Championship title including the players who are currently active Traktor Chelyabinsk honored membersNo Player Position Career1 Sergei Mylnikov G 1976 894 Sergei Babinov D 1972 757 Dmitri Kalinin D 1995 988 Viktor Shuvalov LW 1947 499 Igor Varitsky F 1988 95 2004 0511 Evgeny Davydov RW 1984 8612 Sergei Starikov D 1976 7924 Sergei Makarov RW 1976 7824 Valeri Karpov RW 1988 95 2005 0625 Konstantin Astrakhantsev RW 1988 9425 Andrei Sapozhnikov D 1990 95 1997 9827 Vyacheslav Bykov C 1980 8228 Alexander Semin RW 2001 0230 Andrei Zuyev G 1991 99 2002 0492 Evgeny Kuznetsov RW 2009 Franchise records and leaders editAll time KHL scoring leaders edit These are the top ten point scorers in franchise history Figures are updated after each completed KHL regular season 3 Note Pos Position GP Games played G Goals A Assists Pts Points P G Points per game current Traktor player Points Player Pos GP G A Pts P G nbsp Anton Glinkin LW 503 72 141 213 0 42 nbsp Andrei Popov RW 458 89 80 169 0 37 nbsp Nick Bailen D 254 48 108 156 0 61 nbsp Evgeny Kuznetsov C 210 65 81 146 0 70 nbsp Maxim Yakutsenya RW 276 56 82 138 0 50 nbsp Lukas Sedlak C 164 57 64 121 0 74 nbsp Tomas Hyka RW 145 42 76 118 0 81 nbsp Deron Quint D 264 50 63 113 0 43 nbsp Vladimir Tkachyov C 175 37 74 111 0 63 nbsp Stanislav Chistov LW 255 45 62 107 0 42 Goals Player Pos G nbsp Andrei Popov RW 89 nbsp Anton Glinkin LW 72 nbsp Evgeny Kuznetsov C 65 nbsp Lukas Sedlak C 57 nbsp Maxim Yakutsenya RW 56 nbsp Vitali Kravtsov RW 54 nbsp Deron Quint D 50 nbsp Nick Bailen D 48 nbsp Vyacheslav Osnovin C 48 nbsp Anton Burdasov RW 47 Assists Player Pos A nbsp Anton Glinkin LW 141 nbsp Nick Bailen D 108 nbsp Maxim Yakutsenya RW 82 nbsp Evgeny Kuznetsov C 81 nbsp Andrei Popov RW 80 nbsp Tomas Hyka RW 76 nbsp Vladimir Tkachyov C 74 nbsp Lukas Sedlak C 64 nbsp Petri Kontiola C 63 nbsp Deron Quint D 63Honors editChampions edit nbsp KHL Continental Cup 1 2012 nbsp Vysshaya Liga Championship 1 2006 Runners up edit nbsp Gagarin Cup 1 2013 nbsp Gagarin Cup 3 2012 2018 2022 nbsp USSR Cup 1 1973 nbsp Soviet League Championship 1977 nbsp IHL Championship 2 1993 1994 nbsp Spengler Cup 1 1973References edit History HC Traktor official website Archived from the original on 2014 03 25 Retrieved 2014 07 27 Traktor Chelyabinsk team roster eng hctraktor org Retrieved 2024 04 07 Traktor Chelyabinsk All Time KHL leaders quanthockey com 2024 04 07 Retrieved 2024 04 07 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Traktor Chelyabinsk amp oldid 1218048184, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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