Dinamo Riga

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For the current team, see Dinamo Riga (current).
Logo of Dinamo Riga
Logo of Dinamo Riga

Dinamo Riga was an ice hockey club, based in Riga, Latvia. It was founded in 1946 and disestablished in 1995 as Pārdaugava Rīga.

Contents

[edit] History

Dinamo Riga was one of eleven teams which played in the first Soviet championship tournament in the winter of 1946/1947. Dinamo Riga finished in fourth place behind Dynamo Moscow, CSKA Moscow and Spartak Moscow, making it the highest team based outside Moscow. In the 1987-88 season, Dinamo Riga had their best finish, losing to CSKA Moscow in the final.

In 1975, Viktor Hatulev of Dinamo Rīga became the first ice hockey player from the Soviet Union drafted by the National Hockey League. He never had a chance to play for the NHL, as Soviet players were not allowed to play for foreign teams. In season 1976-77 Dinamo Rīga star Helmuts Balderis was the leading scorer, had the most goals, and won the best player of the season award (MVP). He was also the goal leader in 1975-76 and leading scorer in 1983. He scored 333 goals in his Soviet Union League career.

After the end of Soviet Union, the team continued to play until 1995 as a member of the International Hockey League, the successor of Soviet Hockey League. During this period, the team was called Stars Rīga and later, Pārdaugava Rīga. It was the former team of the Aleksey Nikiforov, coach of many future NHLers.

As of April 7, 2008 the club has been re-established. See Dinamo Riga (current).

[edit] Season-by-season record

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes

Season GP W L T Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs Player statistics
1978-79 44 19 18 7 45 150 132 625 6 None [1]
1979-80 44 16 24 4 36 134 162 8 None [2]
1980-81 49 22 21 6 50 163 157 5 None [3]
1981-82 56 17 33 6 40 202 234 8 None [4]
1982-83 56 27 24 5 59 240 212 619 5 None [5]
1983-84 44 17 19 8 42 146 172 8 None [6]
1984-85 52 18 25 9 45 170 196 531 7 None [7]
1985-86 40 19 15 6 44 138 128 452 5 None [8]
1986-87 40 14 21 5 33 117 132 485 7 None [9]
1987-88 (Stage 1) 26 10 12 4 24 88 92 10
1987-88 (Stage 2) 18 11 3 4 25 66 46 3 Lost in finals [10]
1988-89 44 18 20 6 42 115 131 489 6 None [11]
1989-90 48 26 15 7 59 148 117 5 None [12]
1990-91 46 25 16 5 55 187 138 5 None [13]

[edit] Notes

  • The player statistics for the 1987-88 season are the total for both stages.
  • Soviet league had no playoffs, except for the 1987-88 season.

[edit] Notable Players