Ak Bars Kazan

Ak Bars
Ак Барс
Full name

Ak Bars Kazan 1995–present

  • Itil Kazan 1990–1995
  • SC Uritskogo Kazan 1958–1990
  • Mashstroy Kazan 1956–1958
Nickname(s) "Barses (Snow Leopards), Cats"
Founded 1956
Based In Kazan, Russia
Arena Tatneft Arena
(Capacity: 10,000)
League

KHL 2008-present

Division Kharlamov
Conference Eastern
Uniform
Team Colors               
Head Coach Zinetula Bilyaletdinov
Captain Aleksey Morozov
Affiliates Neftyanik Almetievsk (RUS-2)
Bars (MHL)
Website www.ak-bars.ru

Ak Bars Kazan (Russian: Ак Барс Казань, Tatar Cyrillic: Ак Барс Казан, Latin: Aq Bars Qazan, English: Kazan Snow Leopards) is a professional ice hockey team based in Kazan, in the Republic of Tatarstan, a federal subject of the Russian Federation. They are a current member of the Kontinental Hockey League.

The team's name, Ak Bars, is derived from the official symbol of Tatarstan, translated as Snow Leopard, a traditional symbol which has its origins with the Barsil, one of the Tatar tribes.

Contents

History

Originally founded as Mashstroy Kazan in 1956, the name was later changed to SC Uritskogo Kazan when it entered the Soviet Class B league in 1958. It was promoted to Soviet Class A2, where it gained promotion to the top tier of Soviet hockey. Kazan's performance was respectable, starting the season by winning 6 out of 19 games against the best of the Soviet teams before falling away in the second half of the season and was demoted.

From this point onward, SC Uritskogo Kazan established a reputation as a consistently strong team in the second tier leagues of the USSR. Renowned as a high scoring team, Kazan averaged over four goals a game throughout the 1960s and 1970s. Twice they won the USSR League (lower tiers), being named Champion of Russia in 1962 and 1976.

SC Uritskogo Kazan's most successful period occurred in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The team was led by Russia's Sergei Stolbun; scoring ace Gennady Maslov (current coach of Ak Bars-2 Kazan), who enjoyed a short stint with the Soviet Wings and set a club record of 140 points in 76 games in 1982–83; and Ravil Shavaleev, who was regarded as one of the finest defenseman to ever come out of Tatarstan. During this period, Kazan was consistently among the top teams in the league but failed year after year to gain promotion to the top flight of Soviet hockey.

Following the breakup of the Soviet Union, Uritskogo Kazan became Itil Kazan in 1990 and participated in the IHL. Itil was only mildly successful, narrowly avoiding relegation to the Vysshaya Liga in 1991 and 1992.

It was following the establishment of the Russian Superleague (RSL) in 1996 that the golden age of hockey in Tatarstan began. Renamed Ak Bars Kazan after the traditional symbol of the Tatars, the snow leopard. Benefiting from the resources boom in the Urals, Ak Bars began its history in fine form, finishing first in their respective divisions in 1997 and 1998 along with winning the RSL in 1998. During this period, Kazan lacked the high scoring of their predecessors but regardless continued to be a dominant team in Russian hockey, finishing runners-up in 2000 and 2002. During this period, Kazan developed players such as Denis Arkhipov and Danis Zaripov.

In the 2004–05 season, Kazan signed 11 National Hockey League players, including Russian superstars Alexei Kovalev and Ilya Kovalchuk and Canadians Vincent Lecavalier and Dany Heatley, in an attempt to celebrate Kazan's 100th anniversary with a championship. They did not succeed, however, as a lack of continuity and chemistry saw them finish in fourth place and were upset in the first round of the playoffs by Lokomotiv Yaroslavl.

Since then, Ak Bars Kazan dominated the RSL, winning the league in 2006 on the back of a brilliant performance from Aleksey Morozov. In 2007, Kazan paced the league with 35 wins and 214 goals in 54 games before falling at the final hurdle to Metallurg Magnitogorsk.

Ak Bars has been led in recent years by the dominant "ZZM" line of Sergei Zinovjev, Danis Zaripov, and Aleksey Morozov, who have established themselves as one of the most dominant lines in recent history. Combined with veterans such as Vitaly Proshkin and Vladimir Vorobiev, and imports, such as Ray Giroux, Petr Čajánek, and Jukka Hentunen, Kazan has remained one of the top teams in the league. However, they have been at times criticized for lacking consistency and relying too heavily on star players such as Morozov.[1]

Ak Bars Kazan are strong rivals with Lokomotiv Yaroslavl and the neighboring team of Salavat Yulaev Ufa. However, Ak Bars was the strongest rival with Dynamo Moscow in 1990s.

Season-by-season record

Note: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; Pts = Points; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; P = Playoff

Season GP W L T Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs GP in P W in P L in P GF in P GA in P
1995–96 52 26 13 13 69 136 110 3rd, Western 1
1996-97 44 31 8 5 67 143 88 1st, Super League West
1997–98 46 36 7 3 75 158 79 Champion -
1998–99 42 20 12 10 50 105 75 7th, Super League
1999–00 38 26 8 3 75 158 79 2nd, Elite League
2000-01 44 27 10 6 87 139 84 2nd, Elite League
2001–02 51 31 11 7 101 151 88 2nd, Elite League
2002–03 51 30 13 7 94 156 106 4th, Elite League
2003–04 60 34 21 2 102 161 122 5th, Super League
2004–05 60 37 17 5 114 174 113 4th, Super League Quarterfinal
2005–06 51 30 9 12 98 150 109 2nd, Super League Champion 13 12 1 52 22
2006–07 54 38 7 9 119 214 111 1st, Super League Finalist 16 11 5 56 36
Totals Super League totals

Past team jerseys

Honors

Champions

Runners-up

Players

Current roster

Updated December 29, 2011.[2][3]

# Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
81 Alexeev, NikitaNikita Alexeev  W L 30 2007 Murmansk, Russian SFSR
62 Bergfors, NiclasNiclas Bergfors RW R 24 2011 Södertälje, Sweden
11 Bodrov, EvgenyEvgeny Bodrov C L 24 2009 Togliatti, Russian SFSR
10 Darzinš, LaurisLauris Darzinš  LW R 27 2011 Riga, Latvian SSR
77 Garipov, EmilEmil Garipov G L 20 2011 Kazan, Russian SFSR
85 Glazachev, KonstantinKonstantin Glazachev LW R 27 2011 Arkhangelsk, Russian SFSR
8 Golubev, DenisDenis Golubev C R 20 2009 Magnitogorsk, Russian SFSR
26 Immonen, JarkkoJarkko Immonen C R 29 2009 Rantasalmi, Finland
39 Kapanen, NikoNiko Kapanen C L 33 2008 Hattula, Finland
38 Khomitsky, VadimVadim Khomitsky D L 28 2011 Voskresensk, Russian SFSR
31 Konstantinov, EvgenyEvgeny Konstantinov G L 30 2011 Kazan, Russian SFSR
22 Korneev, KonstantinKonstantin Korneev D L 27 2010 Moscow, Russian SFSR
28 Kulyash, DenisDenis Kulyash  D L 28 2011 Omsk, Russian SFSR
86 Lapenkov, EvgenyEvgeny Lapenkov  LW L 27 2011 Moscow, Russian SFSR
89 Lukoyanov, ArtemArtem Lukoyanov LW L 23 2011 Almetyevsk, Russian SFSR
82 Medvedev, YevgenyYevgeny Medvedev D L 29 2008 Chelyabinsk, Russian SFSR
95 Morozov, AlekseyAleksey Morozov (C) RW L 35 2004 Moscow, Russian SFSR
5 Nikulin, IlyaIlya Nikulin D L 29 2005 Moscow, Russian SFSR
75 Panin, GrigoriGrigori Panin D L 26 2007 Togliatti, Russian SFSR
90 Petrov, KirillKirill Petrov RW L 21 2011 Kazan, Russian SFSR
18 Petrov, OlegOleg Petrov RW L 40 2011 Moscow, Russian SFSR
52 Shavaleev, BulatBulat Shavaleev  RW L 19 2009 Kazan, Russia
72 Skachkov, EvgenyEvgeny Skachkov LW L 27 2010 Moscow, Russian SFSR
49 Spiridonov, MaximMaxim Spiridonov RW L 33 2011 Moscow, Russian SFSR
27 Tereschenko, AlexeiAlexei Tereschenko (A) C L 31 2009 Mozhaysk, Russian SFSR
24 Tokranov, VasiliVasili Tokranov C L 22 2009 Almetyevsk, Russian SFSR
35 Vehanen, PetriPetri Vehanen G L 34 2010 Rauma, Finland
7 Zakharchuk, StepanStepan Zakharchuk D L 25 2009 Amderma, Russian SFSR
25 Zaripov, DanisDanis Zaripov (A) LW L 30 2001 Chelyabinsk, Russian SFSR

NHL alumni

2005 NHL lockout additions

References

External links