HC Dinamo Minsk

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HC Dinamo Minsk
Nickname Bisons
League KHL 2008-present
Conference Western
Division Bobrov
Founded 2003
Home arena Minsk-Arena
(capacity: 15,086)
Owner(s) Belarus BFSO Dinamo
General manager Belarus Vladimir Berezhkov
Captain Belarus Alexei Kalyuzhny
Affiliate(s) Dinamo-Shinnik (MHL)
Website HC Dinamo-Minsk

Hockey Club Dinamo-Minsk (Russian: Дина́мо-Минск; Belarusian: Дынама-Мінск, Dynama-Minsk) is an ice hockey team based in Minsk, Belarus. They are members of the Bobrov Division of the Kontinental Hockey League.

Dinamo has qualified for the KHL playoffs (Gagarin Cup) three times: in 2010-11, 2011-12 and 2014-15 KHL seasons. The team hasn't won a single round of the Gagarin Cup yet, losing in all three series.

Alexei Kalyuzhny is the current captain of the team, with his alternates being Alexander Kulakov and Jonathan Cheechoo.

History

The origins of the club begin in 1966, where the original Dinamo played 5 seasons in the Soviet Top Ice Hockey League, with its highest finish being 10th place in the 1989/90 season. Dinamo was renamed as Tivali Minsk in 1993 and four times became a champion of the Belarusian Championship in 1993, 1994, 1995 and 2000. Tivali was disbanded in 2000. Dinamo was founded in 2003, taking the name of the historic club, and won champion title and Belarus Cup twice.

On March 26, 2008, the KHL confirmed the Belarusian club's inclusion in the Bobrov Division. Dinamo-Minsk started to play on the ice of Minsk Palace of Sports and was relocated to the newly built Minsk-Arena in December 2009. The first head coach of the Belarusian club was Paul Gardner, who was dismissed until the championship had begun. The next one became Jim Hughes, a protégé of previous Belarus national team head coach Curt Fraser. But after the first twelve games the team came down next to the last place and soon Jim Hughes was dismissed. New vacancy was taken by Russian specialist Vasili Spiridonov whose efforts were not enough to raise Dinamo-Minsk from the bottom of the tournament table. The club became the 22nd out of 24 teams.

The next season team began under command of Glen Hanlon, who brought the Belarus national team to the sixth place at WC2006 in Riga. The team roster was fulfilled with world famous players Ville Peltonen and Ossi Väänänen, also one of best the Belarus goaltenders Andrei Mezin was employed by HC Dinamo-Minsk. Season of 2009/2010 was alike to the previous. Team hadn't showed good result and Glen Hanlon was substituted by head coach of HK Homiel. Dinamo-Minsk finished at the 17th spot in the KHL, while missing the play-offs, but still managed to win Spengler Cup under the guidance of Alexander Andrievsky.

Season 2010/2011 became the best season in KHL history of Dinamo-Minsk. The new head coach of the team became Marek Sýkora. Sýkora is widely thought as one of the best coaches of Kontinental Hockey League. He brought Metallurg Magnitogorsk to the final games in 2005 and a rookie of the KHL Avtomobilist to KHL play-offs in 2010. Dinamo-Minsk under his command managed not only to get into the play-offs, but stayed in one step from the Western Conference semi-finals when Lokomotiv prevailed in the decisive game seven of the series. Also Dinamo-Minsk was named the most attended club in the KHL after the 2010-2011 season.

The new season of Dinamo-Minsk was to have begun on September 8, 2011 versus Lokomotiv Yaroslavl. However, on September 7, 2011, a plane carrying the Lokomotiv team to the game in Minsk crashed shortly after takeoff, killing all of the team's roster. Four days later, a memorial ceremony took place at the Minsk-Arena, with all Minsk players paying tributes to each one of the victims.

Arenas

Dinamo called Minsk Sports Palace as their home until they moved to the new Minsk-Arena in 2010.

Honors

Simple cup icon.svg Champions

Flag of Belarus.svg Belarus

Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic BSSR

Flag of Europe.svg Europe

Runners-up

Season-by-season KHL record

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

Season GP W OTW L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Top Scorer Playoffs
2008–09 56 12 3 34 7 49 124 197 6th, Bobrov Yaroslav Chupris (25 points: 9 G, 16 A; 52 GP) Did not qualify
2009–10 56 17 6 31 2 65 139 164 6th, Bobrov Geoff Platt (44 points: 26 G, 18 A; 56 GP) Did not qualify
2010–11 54 17 8 22 7 74 150 155 4th, Tarasov Konstantin Glazachev (35 points: 12 G, 23 A; 52 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 4-3 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)
2011–12 54 21 7 20 6 83 158 148 4th, Tarasov Teemu Laine (42 points: 20 G, 22 A; 54 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 4-0 (Dynamo Moscow)
2012–13 52 18 6 23 5 71 125 148 5th, Tarasov Tim Stapleton (40 points: 24 G, 16 A; 52 GP) Did not qualify
2013–14 54 13 4 31 6 53 102 161 7th, Bobrov Geoff Platt (29 points: 15 G, 14 A; 40 GP) Did not qualify
2014–15 60 27 7 21 5 100 171 159 3rd, Bobrov Charles Linglet (58 points: 22 G, 36 A; 54 GP) Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 4-1 (Jokerit)

Players

Current roster

Updated July 25, 2015.[1][2]

# Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
88 Belarus Alexei Badun D L 34 2014 Grodno, Belarus
55 Belarus Nick Bailen D R 34 2014 Fredonia, New York, USA
53 Belarus Vitali Belinski G R 34 2015 Minsk , Belarus
18 Canada Jonathan Cheechoo RW R 43 2014 Moose Factory, Ontario, Canada
13 Belarus Sergei Drozd C L 33 2010 Minsk, Belarus
10 Canada Matt Ellison W R 40 2014 Duncan, British Columbia, Canada
12 Belarus Andrei Filichkin D L 36 2013 Chelyabinsk, Russia
35 Canada Jeff Glass G L 38 2015 Calgary, Alberta, Canada
89 Belarus Oleg Goroshko D R 34 2011 Grodno, Belarus
43 United States Ryan Gunderson D L 38 2015 Bensalem, Pennsylvania, United States
17 Belarus Alexei Kalyuzhny (C) C L 46 2013 Minsk, Belarus
69 Belarus Mikhail Karnaukhov G L 30 2014 Minsk, Belarus
15 Belarus Pavel Kazakevich D L 30 2015 Minsk, Belarus
91 Belarus Nikita Komarov F R 35 2015 Novopolotsk, Belarus
25 Czech Republic Lukas Krajicek D L 41 2011 Prostejov,Czech Republic
11 Belarus Alexander Kulakov (A) LW L 40 2014 Minsk, Belarus
7 Belarus Charles Linglet LW L 41 2014 Montreal, Quebec, Canada
14 Belarus Yevgeni Lisovets D L 29 2013 Grodno, Belarus
9 Belarus Stanislav Lopachuk RW L 32 2012 Minsk , Belarus
28 Ukraine Olexander Materukhin LW R 42 2013 Kiev , Ukraine
19 Belarus Dmitri Meleshko LW R 41 2008 Minsk , Belarus
95 Belarus Andrei Mikhalev C/LW L 46 2015 Minsk , Belarus
40 Belarus Dmitri Milchakov G L 38 2013 Minsk , Belarus
4 Belarus Yevgeni Nogachyov D L 32 2012 Minsk , Belarus
71 Belarus Alexander Pavlovich RW L 35 2011 Grodno , Belarus
38 Canada Paul Szczechura C R 38 2014 Brantford, Ontario, Canada
23 Belarus Nikita Ustinenko D R 28 2015 Gomel , Belarus
57 Belarus Ivan Usenko D R 41 2015 Gorky, Soviet Union
16 United States Ryan Vesce C R 41 2014 Lloyd Harbor, New York, USA


Franchise scoring leaders (KHL)

These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise history while being a KHL club. Figures are updated after each completed KHL regular season.

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

Franchise records

Regular season

Playoffs

  • Most goals in a playoff season: Geoff Platt, 4 (2010–11)
  • Most assists in a playoff season: Peter Podhradský, 6 (2010–11)
  • Most points in a playoff season: Peter Podhradský, 8 (2010–11)
  • Most penalty minutes in a playoff season: Jordan Henry, 33 (2010–11)
  • Most points in a playoff season, defenseman: Peter Podhradský, 8 (2010–11)
  • Most points in a game, playoff: 3, shared by 5 players

Hat-tricks

  1. Dmitry Meleshko, 11-21-2010 at Metallurg Magnitogorsk - needed 43.26 to complete the feat[4]
  2. Zbyněk Irgl, 11-22-2011 at Barys Astana - needed 31.48 to complete the feat[5]
  3. Jonathan Cheechoo, 09-04-2014 at Jokerit - needed 42.54 to complete the feat[6]
  4. Jonathan Cheechoo, 10-24-2014 at Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk - needed 26.09 to complete the feat[7]

References

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External links