Soviet Union men's national ice hockey team


The Soviet national ice hockey team was the national men's ice hockey team of the Soviet Union. From 1954 to 1991, the team won at least one medal each year at either the Ice Hockey World Championships or the Olympic hockey tournament.
After dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991, the Soviet team competed as the CIS team at the 1992 Winter Olympics. After the Olympics, the CIS team ceased to exist and was replaced by Russia at the 1992 World Championship. Other former Soviet republics established their own national teams later that year. The International Ice Hockey Federation recognized the Ice Hockey Federation of Russia as the successor to the Soviet Union hockey federation and passed its ranking on to Russia. The other national hockey teams were considered new and sent to compete in Pool C.
The IIHF Centennial All-Star Team included four Soviet-Russian players out of a team of six: goalie Vladislav Tretiak, defenseman Vyacheslav Fetisov and forwards Valeri Kharlamov and Sergei Makarov who played for the Soviet team in the 1970s and the 1980s.

History

Ice hockey was not properly introduced into the Soviet Union until the 1940s, though bandy, a similar game played on a larger ice field, had long been popular in the country. It was during a tour of FC Dynamo Moscow of the United Kingdom in 1945 that Soviet officials first got the idea of establishing an ice hockey program. They watched several exhibition matches in London, and National Hockey League President Clarence Campbell would later say that "This was the time when the Russians got the idea for their hockey team. The Russian soccer players were more interested in watching Canadian players play hockey than in soccer." The Soviet Championship League was established in 1946, and the national team was formed shortly after, playing their first matches in a series of exhibitions against LTC Praha in 1948.
The Soviets planned to send a team to the 1953 World Championships, but due to an injury to Vsevolod Bobrov, one of their star players, officials decided against going. They would make their debut at the 1954 World Championships instead. Largely unknown to the larger hockey world, the team surprised many by winning the gold medal, defeating Canada in the final game. In 2013, the Soviet national team was awarded the IIHF Milestone Award for winning the gold medal in their first appearance at the World Championships and the beginning of a rivalry against Canada.
The Soviets played their first exhibition tour in Canada in 1957, which perpetuated a rivalry between the countries. Throughout the rest of the 1950s the World Championships were largely contested between Canada and the Soviet Union. That changed in the early 1960s. Canada won the gold in 1961, and after missing the 1962 tournament due to political issues, the Soviets would win the gold medal every year until 1972. They faced perhaps their greatest upset at the 1976 World Championships; in their opening match against host Poland, the Soviets were defeated 6–4.
In 1972 the Soviets played Canada in an exhibition series that saw the Soviet national team play a team composed of National Hockey League players for the first time. Both the Olympics and World Championships did not allow professionals, so the best Canadian players were never able to compete against the Soviets, and in protest at this Canada had left international hockey in 1970. This series, known as the Summit Series, was a chance to see how the NHL players would fare. In eight games, the teams were close, and it took until the final 34 seconds of the eighth game for Canada to win the series, four games to three, with one tie.
At the 1980 Winter Olympics, the Soviets also had one of their most notable losses. Playing the United States in the medal round, the Soviets lost 4–3. This match, later dubbed the Miracle on Ice, was notable because it had the Soviets, recognized as the top international team in the world, against an American team composed largely of university-level players. The Americans would go on to win the gold medal in the tournament, while the Soviets finished with the silver, only the second time they failed to win gold at the Olympics since their debut in 1956.
The reforms of the 1980s in the Soviet Union had a detrimental effect on the national team. No longer afraid to speak out against their treatment, players like Viacheslav Fetisov and Igor Larionov openly critiqued the management style of their coach, Viktor Tikhonov, which included being secluded in a military-style barracks for eleven months of the year. They also sought the chance to move to North America and play in the NHL, though the authorities were reluctant to allow this. Negotiations with the NHL began in the late 1980s over this, and in 1989 several players, including both Fetisov and Larionov, were permitted to leave the Soviet Union and join NHL teams.
Yuri Korolev was head of the research group for the national men's team from 1964 to 1992, and contributed to the team winning seventeen Ice Hockey World Championships and seven Winter Olympic Games gold medals.
Journalist Vsevolod Kukushkin traveled with the national team as both a reporter and an English to Russian translator. He had access to the team's locker room and the opportunity to speak directly with the players and be part of their daily life. In his 2016 book The Red Machine, Kukushkin reported that the nickname for the Soviet national team came into usage during the 1983 Super Series, when a headline in a Minneapolis newspaper headline read "The Red Machine rolled down on us".

Statistics

Leading scorers
  1. Sergei Makarov – 248 points
  2. Aleksandr Maltsev – 213+ points
  3. Valeri Kharlamov – 199 points
  4. Boris Mikhailov – 180 points
  5. Vladimir Petrov – 176 points

    Tournament record

Olympic Games

World Championship

YearLocationResult
1954Stockholm, Gold
1955Krefeld / Dortmund / Cologne, Silver
1957Moscow, Silver
1958Oslo, Silver
1959Prague / Bratislava, Silver
1961Geneva / Lausanne, Bronze
1963Stockholm, Gold
1965Tampere, Gold
1966Ljubljana, Gold
1967Vienna, Gold
1968Grenoble, Gold
1969Stockholm, Gold
1970Stockholm, Gold
1971Bern / Geneva, Gold
1972Prague, Silver
1973Moscow, Gold
1974Helsinki, Gold
1975Munich / Düsseldorf, Gold
1976Katowice, Silver
1977Vienna, Bronze
1978Prague, Gold
1979Moscow, Gold
1981Gothenburg / Stockholm, Gold
1982Helsinki / Tampere, Gold
1983Düsseldorf / Dortmund / Munich, Gold
1985Prague, Bronze
1986Moscow, Gold
1987Vienna, Silver
1989Stockholm / Södertälje, Gold
1990Bern / Fribourg, Gold
1991Turku / Helsinki / Tampere, Bronze

Summit Series

  • 1972 – Lost to Canada
  • 1974 – Won series against Canada
On the 40th anniversary of the 1972 Summit Series, the IIHF Milestone Award was given to the Canadian and Russian teams for the event which had a "decisive influence on the development of the game". Reuters wrote that Canada was expected to win the series easily, but when they came from behind to win in the eighth and final game, it marked "the beginning of the modern hockey era".

Canada Cup

  • 1976 – Finished in 3rd place
  • 1981 – Won championship
  • 1984 – Lost semifinal
  • 1987 – Lost final
  • 1991 – Finished in 5th place

    Challenge Cup and Rendez-vous vs. NHL All-Stars

  • 1979 – Won series
  • 1987 – Tied series

    Other tournaments

  • Deutschland Cup: Gold medal
  • Nissan Cup: '''Gold medal'''

    Team

Notable players

  • Yevgeny Babich
  • Helmuts Balderis
  • Vsevolod Bobrov
  • Vyacheslav Bykov
  • Vitaly Davydov
  • Vyacheslav Fetisov
  • Anatoli Firsov
  • Valeri Kamensky
  • Sergei Kapustin
  • Alexei Kasatonov
  • Valeri Kharlamov
  • Vladimir Krutov
  • Alfred Kuchevsky
  • Igor Larionov
  • Sergei Makarov
  • Alexander Maltsev
  • Boris Mikhailov
  • Vladimir Petrov
  • Alexander Ragulin
  • Vyacheslav Starshinov
  • Vladislav Tretiak
  • Valeri Vasiliev
  • Alexander Yakushev
  • Yevgeni Zimin
  • Viktor Zinger

    Amateur status of players

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. However, the Soviet team was populated with amateur players who were primarily full-time athletes hired as regular workers of a company or organization that sponsored what would be presented as an after-hours social sports society hockey team for their workers in order to keep their amateur status. By the 1970s, several national hockey federations, such as Canada, protested the use of the amateur status for players of Eastern Bloc teams and even withdrew from the 1972 and 1976 Winter Games in protest.