Metallurg Magnitogorsk Explained

Current:2023–24 KHL season
Team:Metallurg Magnitogorsk
Colour:background:#FFFFFF; border-top:#003366 5px solid; border-bottom:#003366 5px solid;
Colour Text:black
Logosize:255px
Founded:1955
City:Magnitogorsk, Russia
Arena:Arena Metallurg
Capacity:7,704
League:Kontinental Hockey League
Division:Kharlamov
Conference:Eastern
Owner:Viktor Rashnikov
Gm:Sergei Laskov
Coach:Andrei Razin
Captain:Egor Yakovlev
Affiliates:Zauralie Kurgan (VHL)
Yuzhny Ural Orsk (VHL)
Steel Foxes (MHL) Magnitka Magnitogorsk (VHL)

Metallurg Magnitogorsk (Russian: Металлург Магнитогорск) is a professional ice hockey team based in Magnitogorsk, Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia. They are members of the Kharlamov Division of the Kontinental Hockey League. They also competed in the Champions Hockey League, losing the 2008–09 season championship round to Swiss club, the ZSC Lions.

Metallurg Magnitogorsk won the Gagarin Cup in the 2013–14 KHL season, 2015–16 KHL season, and the 2023–24 KHL season.

History

Metallurg was founded in 1955 by the Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works as a Class B team that competed in the Chelyabinsk Oblast and the RSFSR championships. Since the 80s it joined the Second League (third by importance) of the Soviet Class A and won its championships twice, in 1988–89 and 1989–90 seasons. After two more seasons in the second level of the USSR hockey Magnitogorsk club became one of the founders of the International Hockey League, the first Post-Soviet major pro hockey association. Magnitogorsk advanced to the Russian Superleague finals six times becoming a three-time champion of Russia.

Victoria Cup

On 1 October 2008, Metallurg Magnitogorsk played against NHL's New York Rangers in the inaugural Victoria Cup at the PostFinance-Arena in Bern with an attendance of 13,794.[1] Metallurg Magnitogorsk led most of the game, 3–0 at one point, but ultimately lost 4–3 by the Rangers' Ryan Callahan breakaway goal with 20 seconds remaining in the game.[2] Denis Platonov, Vladimir Malenkikh and Nikolai Zavarukhin scored for Metallurg, and Dan Fritsche scored and Chris Drury scored twice for the Rangers. As a sign of respect, Russian Dmitri Kalinin and Ukrainian Nikolay Zherdev accepted the Victoria Cup trophy on behalf of the New York Rangers.[3]

2022

After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Juho Olkinuora elected to leave the team.[4] [5]

Season-by-season record

For the full season-by-season history, see List of Metallurg Magnitogorsk seasons.

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 L OTW OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
1997–98 46 31 5 - - 72 173 82 2nd, all league Russian Cup Champions, 3–1 (HC Dynamo Moscow)
1998–99 42 34 2 - - 74 180 80 1st, all league Champions of Russia, 4–2 (HC Dynamo Moscow)
38 24 9 1 1 78 132 96 3rd, all league Lost in Semifinals, 2–3 (Ak Bars Kazan)
2000–01 54 24 9 6 2 87 153 96 1st, Group A Champions of Russia, 4–2 (Avangard Omsk)
51 28 15 3 3 95 152 125 5th, all league Lost in Semifinals, 0–3 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)
51 23 14 2 4 85 121 101 6th, all league Lost in Quarterfinals, 0–3 (Severstal Cherepovets)
60 35 18 2 1 114 176 129 1st, all league Lost in Finals, 2–3 (Avangard Omsk)
60 34 15 2 4 115 193 124 3rd, all league Lost in Quarterfinals, 2–3 (Avangard Omsk)
51 38 4 4 4 127 175 75 1st, all league Lost in Semifinals, 1–3 (Avangard Omsk)
2006–07 54 30 14 2 1 102 146 99 4th, all league Champions of Russia, 3–2 (Ak Bars Kazan)
57 31 12 4 3 115 175 113 2nd, all league Lost in Semifinals, 0–3 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)
56 25 15 13 3 104 174 148 2nd, Tarasov Lost in Semifinals, 1–4 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)
56 34 15 6 1 115 167 111 1st, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Semifinals, 2–4 (Ak Bars Kazan)
54 27 14 6 7 100 167 141 2nd, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Finals, 3–4 (Salavat Yulaev Ufa)
54 29 20 3 4 94 150 137 2nd, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Semifinals, 1–4 (Avangard Omsk)
52 27 13 0 12 93 167 121 3rd, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 3–4 (Salavat Yulaev Ufa)
2013–14 54 35 11 0 2 108 166 113 1st, Kharlamov Gagarin Cup Champions, 4–3 (Lev Praha)
60 32 15 8 5 117 174 129 2nd, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Semifinals, 1–4 (Sibir Novosibirsk)
2015–16 60 25 20 13 2 103 180 138 1st, Kharlamov Gagarin Cup Champions, 4–3 (CSKA Moscow)
60 36 13 5 6 124 197 135 1st, Kharlamov Lost in Gagarin Cup Finals, 1–4 (SKA Saint Petersburg)
56 24 17 8 7 95 150 135 4th, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Semifinals, 1–4 (Ak Bars Kazan)
62 35 19 6 2 84 182 132 2nd, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Salavat Yulaev Ufa)
62 20 25 8 9 65 138 145 4th, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 1–4 (Barys Nur-Sultan)
60 31 16 6 7 81 165 138 2nd, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Semifinals, 2–4 (Avangard Omsk)
48 26 11 8 3 71 164 120 1st, Kharlamov Lost in Gagarin Cup Finals, 3–4 (CSKA Moscow)
68 30 20 5 13 83 189 175 3rd, Kharlamov Lost in Conference Semifinals, 0–4 (Avangard Omsk)
2023–24 68 35 17 9 7 95 212 167 1st, Kharlamov Gagarin Cup Champions, 4–0 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)

Players

Team captains

Head coaches

Retired numbers

Metallurg Magnitogorsk retired numbers
width=40px" No.width=200px" Playerwidth=40px" Positionwidth=100px" Careerwidth=150px" Date of retirement
15 C 1997–2011 28 August 2012
34 LW 1989–2010 19 November 2012

Franchise leaders

All-time KHL scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise history. Figures are updated after each completed KHL regular season.[6]

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

Points
Player Pos GP G A Pts P/G
LW 519 263 290 553 1.06
C 285 97 189 286 1.01
LW 229 87 140 227 .99
D 253 45 144 189 .75
RW 493 85 84 169 .34
D 381 52 92 144 .38
LW 245 65 69 134 .55
LW 215 68 57 125 .58
C 231 30 90 120 .52
D 298 32 85 117 .39
Goals
Player Pos G
LW 263
C 97
LW 87
RW 85
LW 68
LW 65
LW 56
D 52
LW 48
RW 47
Assists
Player Pos A
LW 290
C 189
D 144
LW 140
D 92
C 90
D 85
D 84
RW 84
RW 78

Awards and trophies

Gagarin Cup

Opening Cup

Russian Superleague

Silver Stone Trophy

IIHF Super Cup

Champions Hockey League

Spengler Cup

Victoria Cup

Tampere Cup

Hockeyades (Vallé de Joux)

Davos Hockey Summit

Notes and References

  1. IIHF Top 100 Hockey Stories of All Time, Szymon Szemberg and Andrew Podnieks, p. 167, Fenn Publishing, Bolton, Ontario, Canada, 2008, .
  2. IIHF Top 100 Hockey Stories of All Time, Szymon Szemberg and Andrew Podnieks, p. 173, Fenn Publishing, Bolton, Ontario, Canada, 2008, .
  3. Web site: NY Rangers victorious, 4-3 . www.iihf.com . 27 April 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081004035838/http://www.iihf.com/home-of-hockey/news/news-singleview/article/new-york-rangers-victorious.html . 4 October 2008 . dead.
  4. Web site: NHL Suspends Dealings with KHL as Russia's Ukraine Invasion Impacts Hockey World . .
  5. Web site: Snapshots: KHL Departures, AHL Signings, NHL Trade Market .
  6. Web site: Franchise All-Time Stats for Metallurg Magnitogorsk . quanthockey.com . 2023-03-12 . 2023-03-12.