Silk routes/Soviet Union/ Big park .Famous ice hockey team. Old people dance to music . Part. 21

Описание к видео Silk routes/Soviet Union/ Big park .Famous ice hockey team. Old people dance to music . Part. 21

Big park
Famous ice hockey team
Old people dance to music
Young boys and girls spend their evenings in cinema.
The Russian men's national ice hockey team (Russian: Сборная России по хоккею с шайбой) is the national men's ice hockey team of Russia, overseen by the Ice Hockey Federation of Russia. As of 2021, they were rated third in the IIHF World Ranking.[3] The team has competed internationally from 1992 until a 2022 ban, and is recognized by the IIHF as the successor to the Soviet Union team and CIS team. Russia has been one of the most successful national ice hockey teams in the world and a member of the so-called "Big Six," the unofficial group of the six strongest men's ice hockey nations, along with Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, Sweden, and the United States.[4] The European nations of the Big Six participate in the Euro Hockey Tour, which Russia won nine times since 2005.[5] Since September 2021, the head coach is Alexei Zhamnov, who took over from Valeri Bragin.[6]

Since the establishment of the team, Russia has participated in 29 IIHF World Championships tournaments and nine Olympic ice hockey tournaments, winning five world championships and one Olympic gold medal.[a]

After the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the International Ice Hockey Federation suspended Russia from all levels of competition on February 28, 2022.[10] In April 2022, the Federation banned Russia from participating in the 2023 IIHF World Championship.[11]


Contents
1 History
1.1 Origins
1.2 After the USSR's dissolution
1.3 The post-Soviet drought
1.4 The Russian resurgence
1.4.1 The Bykov period
1.4.2 Bilyaletdinov at the helm
1.4.3 The Znarok years
1.4.4 Vorobiev as head coach
1.4.5 Kudashov's realm
1.4.6 Bragin's team
1.4.7 Zhamnov's team
2 Tournament record
2.1 Olympic Games
2.2 World Championship
2.3 World Cup
2.4 Euro Hockey Tour
2.4.1 Euro Hockey Tour medal table
2.4.2 Tournament summary
2.4.3 Russia's Euro Hockey Tour (EHT) Cup medal table
2.5 Other tournaments
3 Team
3.1 Current roster
3.2 Coaching history
4 Uniform evolution
5 See also
6 Notes
7 References
8 External links
History
Origins
Main article: Soviet Union national ice hockey team
The Allrussian Hockey League was founded by some clubs in the Russian Empire and entered the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) in 1911.[12] However, probably due to misunderstandings ("hockey" was identified with bandy or Russian hockey in Russia, not with the modern ice hockey rules developed in Canada) the Russian team left the organization. There were no matches involving a team from Imperial Russia.[13]

Interest in this sport grew in the Soviet Union in the 2nd half of the 1940s. The first reactions were skeptical; one sports journal, Physical Culture and Sports, characterized it as such: "The game is quite individual and primitive, with few combinations, not as in bandy. Therefore, Canadian hockey should not be cultivated into our country..."[13] However, Canadian hockey became more and more popular in the Soviet Union.[citation needed]

The first Soviet Championships League was introduced in 1946. The national team was formed shortly after, playing their first matches in a series of exhibitions against LTC Praha in 1948.[14][15] In 1952, the Hockey Federation of the USSR joined the International Ice Hockey League, and so received the permission to play in the World Championships and the Olympics. That year is seen as the birth of the Soviet national ice hockey team, the predecessor team of the Russia men's national ice hockey team.[16] The Soviets won the 1954 Ice Hockey World Championships, and two years later they won gold at the 1956 Winter Olympics.[12]

From then until the demise of the Soviet Union in 1991, the "Red Machine" (Russian: Красная Машина; Krasnaya Mashina) was one of the most dominant teams in international play, winning nearly every World Championship and Olympic tournament,[17][12] as well as defeating many teams with professional players, such as in the 1974 Summit Series, the Super Series, and the 1981 Canada Cup. Until 1977, professional players were not able to participate in the World Championship, and it was not until 1988 that they could play in the Winter Olympics. The Soviet team was populated with amateur players who were hired by Soviet enterprises (aircraft industry, food workers, tractor industry) or organizations (KGB, Red Army, Soviet Air Force) that sponsored what would be presented as an after-hours social sports society hockey team for their workers but were set-up for the athletes to train full-time.[18][19] This type of amateur player was contested by Canada and the United States whose best players were participating in professional leagues.
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