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Metallurg Magnitogorsk

Ice hockey team based in Magnitogorsk, Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia

Metallurg Magnitogorsk

Summary

Ice hockey team based in Magnitogorsk, Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia

FieldValue
current2025–26 KHL season
teamMetallurg Magnitogorsk
bg_colourbackground:#FFFFFF; border-top:#003366 5px solid; border-bottom:#003366 5px solid;
text_colourblack
logoHC Metallurg Magnitogorsk.png
logo_size230px
founded1955
cityMagnitogorsk, Russia
arenaArena Metallurg
capacity7,704
leagueKontinental Hockey League
divisionKharlamov
conferenceEastern
uniform[[File:MagnitogorskMetallurg 2013.pngJerseys for 2013/2014 season150px]]
colours
ownerViktor Rashnikov
gmSergei Laskov
coachAndrei Razin
captainEgor Yakovlev
affiliatesMagnitka Magnitogorsk (VHL)
Stalnye Lisy (MHL)
website

Stalnye Lisy (MHL) Metallurg Magnitogorsk () is a professional ice hockey club based in Magnitogorsk, Russia. It is a member of the Kharlamov Division in the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL).

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 (MMK) as a Class B team that competed in the Chelyabinsk Oblast and the RSFSR championships. Since 1980, they were led by the head coach Valery Postnikov. Under his leadership, the club won the Second League Class B, a fourth-tier league, and was promoted to the third-tier Second League Class A, then won its championships twice, in 1988–89 and 1989–90 seasons. After two more seasons in the second level of Soviet hockey, Metallurg became one of the founders of the International Hockey League (MHL), the first post-Soviet major professional hockey league. Thanks to MMK's funding, Metallurg acquired several key players from other clubs, including Sergei Mogilnikov from Torpedo Ust-Kamenogorsk, Andrei Martemyanov from Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg and Igor Ulshin from HC Sibir Novosibirsk. In their first season in the top flight, Metallurg managed to reach sixth place in the Eastern Conference, then upset HC Spartak Moscow, one of the historic powerhouses of Soviet hockey, in the first round of the playoffs before falling to Traktor Chelyabinsk in the second round. In the 1995 MHL playoffs, Metallurg reached the semifinals, and in 1996 they earned a spot in the final series, which they lost to HC Dynamo Moscow 1-3. Valery Postnikov coached the team until 1996, then his assistant Valery Belousov took over.

next season]], Metallurg won both the regular season and the playoffs, earning the title of Champions of Russia. They also won their second European title in the [[1999-2000 European Hockey League]].

In total, Metallurg advanced to the Russian Superleague finals six times and became a three-time champion of Russia. The club also won the 2008 edition of the IIHF European Champions Cup and reached the finals the Champions Hockey League in 2009, losing the final series to the Swiss ZSC Lions.

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. 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. 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.

KHL

Metallurg Magnitogorsk was a founding member of the Kontinental Hockey League and qualified to the Gagarin Cup playoffs in all of its seasons. They won the Gagarin Cup in the 2013–14 KHL season, 2015–16 KHL season, and the 2023–24 KHL season.

In the inaugural season of the new league Metallurg played in the Tarasov Division and placed second after HC CSKA Moscow. In the playoffs, they won bronze medals after beating Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod 3-0 and Atlant Mytichtchi 3-1 and losing to Lokomotiv Yaroslavl 1-4.

In the second season, the KHL divided into conferences for the first time, and Metallurg was placed into the Kharlamov Division of the Eastern Conference. They finished the regular season on top of the division and defeated Traktor Chelyabinsk 3-1 in the first round of the playoffs, but were eliminated in the second round by the reigning champion Ak Bars Kazan in six games.

Sergey Mozyakin had been Metallurg's star player in the KHL. He played in Magnitogorsk between 2011 and 2021. His number 10 has been retired by the club. He holds the all-time goalscoring record in the KHL with 351 goals and held the points record with 928 points until it was beaten by Vadim Shipachyov in 2024. In the 2016-17 KHL season he set records for most points (85, beaten by Nikita Gusev in 2023-24) and most goals (48, beaten by Joshua Leivo in 2024-25) in a KHL regular season.

After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Juho Olkinuora elected to leave the team.

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

SeasonGPWLOTWOTLPtsGFGAFinishPlayoffs
1997–9846315--72173822nd, all leagueRussian Cup Champions, 3–1 (HC Dynamo Moscow)
1998–9942342--74180801st, all leagueChampions of Russia, 4–2 (HC Dynamo Moscow)
1999–2000382491178132963rd, all leagueLost in Semifinals, 2–3 (Ak Bars Kazan)
2000–01542496287153961st, Group AChampions of Russia, 4–2 (Avangard Omsk)
2001–0251281533951521255th, all leagueLost in Semifinals, 0–3 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)
2002–0351231424851211016th, all leagueLost in Quarterfinals, 0–3 (Severstal Cherepovets)
2003–04603518211141761291st, all leagueLost in Finals, 2–3 (Avangard Omsk)
2004–05603415241151931243rd, all leagueLost in Quarterfinals, 2–3 (Avangard Omsk)
2005–065138444127175751st, all leagueLost in Semifinals, 1–3 (Avangard Omsk)
2006–0754301421102146994th, all leagueChampions of Russia, 3–2 (Ak Bars Kazan)
2007–08573112431151751132nd, all leagueLost in Semifinals, 0–3 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)
2008–095625151331041741482nd, TarasovLost in Semifinals, 1–4 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)
2009–10563415611151671111st, KharlamovLost in Conference Semifinals, 2–4 (Ak Bars Kazan)
2010–11542714671001671412nd, KharlamovLost in Conference Finals, 3–4 (Salavat Yulaev Ufa)
2011–1254292034941501372nd, KharlamovLost in Conference Semifinals, 1–4 (Avangard Omsk)
2012–13522713012931671213rd, KharlamovLost in Conference Quarterfinals, 3–4 (Salavat Yulaev Ufa)
2013–14543511021081661131st, KharlamovGagarin Cup Champions, 4–3 (Lev Praha)
2014–15603215851171741292nd, KharlamovLost in Conference Semifinals, 1–4 (Sibir Novosibirsk)
2015–166025201321031801381st, KharlamovGagarin Cup Champions, 4–3 (CSKA Moscow)
2016–17603613561241971351st, KharlamovLost in Gagarin Cup Finals, 1–4 (SKA Saint Petersburg)
2017–1856241787951501354th, KharlamovLost in Conference Semifinals, 1–4 (Ak Bars Kazan)
2018–1962351962841821322nd, KharlamovLost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Salavat Yulaev Ufa)
2019–2062202589651381454th, KharlamovLost in Conference Quarterfinals, 1–4 (Barys Nur-Sultan)
2020–2160311667811651382nd, KharlamovLost in Conference Semifinals, 2–4 (Avangard Omsk)
2021–2248261183711641201st, KharlamovLost in Gagarin Cup Finals, 3–4 (CSKA Moscow)
2022–23683020513831891753rd, KharlamovLost in Conference Semifinals, 0–4 (Avangard Omsk)
2023–2468351797952121671st, KharlamovGagarin Cup Champions, 4–0 (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl)
2024–25683021134901971542nd, KharlamovLost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Avangard Omsk)

Players

Current roster

Team captains

  • Sergei Mogilnikov 1991–94
  • Sergei Starkovski 1994–95
  • Mikhail Borodulin 1995–96
  • Evgeny Koreshkov 1996–97
  • Mikhail Borodulin 1997–99
  • Sergei Gomolyako 1999–2000
  • Evgeny Koreshkov 2000–03
  • Valeri Karpov 2003–05
  • Evgeny Varlamov 2005–06
  • Ravil Gusmanov 2006–08
  • Vitaly Atyushov 2008–11
  • Sergei Fedorov 2011–12
  • Denis Platonov 2012
  • Evgeni Malkin 2012–13
  • Sergei Mozyakin 2013–21
  • Egor Yakovlev 2021–

Head coaches

  • Felix Mirsky 1955–57
  • Georgy Mordukhovich 1957–58
  • Georgy Mordukhovich 1969–71
  • Valery Postnikov 1971–76
  • Khalim Mingaleev 1976–79
  • Valery Postnikov 1979–96
  • Valery Belousov 1996–2003
  • Marek Sykora 2003–05
  • Dave King 2005–06
  • Fedor Kanareykin 2006–07
  • Valery Postnikov 2007–08
  • Valery Belousov 2008–10
  • Kari Heikkilä 2010–11
  • Aleksander Barkov 2011
  • Fedor Kanareykin 2011–12
  • Paul Maurice 2012–13
  • Mike Keenan 2013–15
  • Ilya Vorobiev 2015–17
  • Viktor Kozlov 2017–18
  • Josef Jandač 2018–19
  • Ilya Vorobiev 2019–23
  • Andrei Razin 2023–present

Retired numbers

No.PlayerPositionCareerDate of retirement
15CZE Jan MarekC1997–201128 August 2012
34RUS Ravil GusmanovLW1989–201019 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.

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

PlayerPosGPGAPtsP/G
RUS Sergei Mozyakin
CZE Jan Kovář
RUS Danis Zaripov
CAN Chris Lee
RUS Denis Platonov
RUS Viktor Antipin
RUS Andrei Chibisov
CZE Tomáš Rolinek
RUS Egor Yakovlev
RUS Alexei Kaigorodov
PlayerPosG
RUS Sergei Mozyakin
CZE Jan Kovář
RUS Danis Zaripov
RUS Denis Platonov
CZE Tomáš Rolinek
RUS Andrei Chibisov
FIN Oskar Osala
RUS Denis Zernov
RUS Viktor Antipin
RUS Nikolay Kulemin
PlayerPosA
RUS Sergei Mozyakin
CZE Jan Kovář
CAN Chris Lee
RUS Danis Zaripov
RUS Viktor Antipin
RUS Egor Yakovlev
RUS Alexei Kaigorodov
RUS Yevgeny Biryukov
RUS Denis Platonov
RUS Maxim Karpov

Awards and trophies

Gagarin Cup

Opening Cup

Russian Superleague

Silver Stone Trophy

IIHF Super Cup

  • Winners (1): 2000
  • Runners-up (1): 1999

Champions Hockey League

Spengler Cup

Victoria Cup

  • Runners-up (1): 2008

Tampere Cup

  • Winners (3): 2005, 2006, 2008

Hockeyades (Vallé de Joux)

  • Winners (1): 2009

Davos Hockey Summit

  • Runners-up (1): 2018

References

References

  1. (17 March 2024). "Смена ролей. «Металлург» и «Спартак» тридцать лет спустя". [[Kontinental Hockey League]].
  2. "Valeri Postnikov". Eliteprospects.
  3. "История клуба". [[HC Metallurg Magnitogorsk]].
  4. IIHF Top 100 Hockey Stories of All Time, Szymon Szemberg and Andrew Podnieks, p. 167, Fenn Publishing, Bolton, Ontario, Canada, 2008, {{ISBN. 978-1-55168-358-4.
  5. IIHF Top 100 Hockey Stories of All Time, Szymon Szemberg and Andrew Podnieks, p. 173, Fenn Publishing, Bolton, Ontario, Canada, 2008, {{ISBN. 978-1-55168-358-4.
  6. "NY Rangers victorious, 4-3".
  7. (27 July 2024). "«Металлург» вывел номер Сергея Мозякина из обращения". [[Sport-Express]].
  8. (28 October 2025). "Шипачев вышел на второе место в списке лучших снайперов регулярных чемпионатов КХЛ". [[Sport-Express]].
  9. (28 October 2024). "Мозякин после рекорда Шипачева: «Вадя, мои поздравления. Ты огромный молодец»". [[Sport-Express]].
  10. (24 February 2024). "Гусев побил рекорд Мозякина по очкам за один регулярный чемпионат КХЛ". [[Sport-Express]].
  11. (22 March 2025). "Ливо побил рекорд Мозякина по голам за один регулярный чемпионат КХЛ". [[Sport-Express]].
  12. "NHL Suspends Dealings with KHL as Russia's Ukraine Invasion Impacts Hockey World".
  13. "Snapshots: KHL Departures, AHL Signings, NHL Trade Market".
  14. (2023-03-12). "Franchise All-Time Stats for Metallurg Magnitogorsk". quanthockey.com.
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