KHL Game Day Round-Up | September 16, 2022

SKA keeps winning, Avangard starts winning.

SKA extended its winning streak to seven games at the start of the season, edging Dynamo in a hard-fought game in Moscow. There was relief for Avangard, which got its first win of the season at the seventh attempt thanks to a 5-2 win at Barys. However, Neftekhimik is still seeking its first success after a 0-4 loss at Traktor. Avtomobilist beat Sibir in the battle of the East’s early leaders, Ak Bars moved into second thanks to an OT win over Dinamo Minsk and Torpedo needed the extras to edge past Spartak. Kunlun Red Star posted a 3-1 victory over Sochi as Garet Hunt got into his latest fight.

Hawks victorious at last

Barys Nur-Sultan 2 Avangard Omsk 5 (1-2, 0-3, 1-0)

At the seventh time of asking, Avangard secured its first victory of the KHL season. The second of its back-to-back games at Barys brought the long-awaited win and secured a first success for Dmitry Ryabykin in his new role as head coach of the Hawks.

Ryabykin made three changes to the team that lost 3-5 yesterday. Forward Nail Yakupov and defenseman Fyodor Belyakov were scratched with Nikita Mikhailov and Timofei Davydov called in to replace them. Vasily Demchenko got the start in goal.

The visitor made a bright start, dominating the early exchanges and taking the lead in the ninth minute. Vladimir Zharkov battled for the puck behind the net and set up Alexander Dergachyov on the slot for a one-timer. This was the first time in five games that Avangard opened the scoring.

Late in the frame, the teams traded goals. Avangard extended its lead when Mikhail Gulyayev’s point shot sparked a scrummage on the slot. Vladimir Tkachyov got control of the puck and set up Sergei Tolchinsky for a calm finish into an open net. Exactly one minute later, though, Barys pulled a goal back through Yegor Petukhov.

Given Avangard’s recent form, allowing that late goal might have proved demoralizing. Instead, though, the Hawks came out for the middle frame and put the game to bed. Reid Boucher extended the lead on the power play, and 49 seconds later Semyon Chistyakov made it 4-1, scoring on replacement goalie Nikita Boyarkin. The visitor never relinquished its control of the game and added a fifth goal through Alexei Bereglazov late in the frame.

True, Barys got one back at the start of the third period when Linden Vey reduced the arrears. However, even with the help of two power play chances, the home team could make no further inroads as Avangard calmly closed out its first win of the campaign.

Proskuryakov blanks winless Neftekhimik

Traktor Chelyabinsk 4 Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk 0 (2-0, 2-0, 0-0)

Avangard’s success means that Neftekhimik is the last remaining team without a win in this season’s KHL. And, in truth, Oleg Leontyev’s team never looked like adding to its solitary point in this game. Not even the return of fit again Rafael Bikmullin, one of five changes to the Neftekhimik roster, could lift the team as Traktor bounced back from its disappointing road trip.

The opening exchanges saw the home team assume control of the game. There were several penalties early on, and Traktor’s power play opened the scoring in the sixth minute through Sergei KalininAnton Burdasov extended his productive streak to five games with an assist on that one. Vladimir Tkachyov extended the home lead midway through the opening stanza when he got clear of the defense and impressively beat Alexander Sudnitsin in the Nefetkhimik net.

The visitor made a better contest in the second period. Neftekhimik even had the puck in the net, but a bench challenge saw the play whistled down for interference on goalie Ilya Proskuryakov. Leontyev’s team had the edge in terms of shots and possession, but could not find a legitimate route past Traktor’s netminder. Then, in the 34th minute, a punishing counterattack saw Alexei Byvaltsev extend the home lead. Tkachyov potted his second of the game before the intermission and Neftekhimik’s promising stats were left in the dust by the reality of a 0-4 scoreline.

The visitor’s day was summed up by a 5-on-3 power play early in the third. Proskuryakov produced save after save to preserve his shut out and Traktor went on to record its first regulation-time win of the season.

Ex-players shoot down Sibir

Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg 5 Sibir Novosibirsk 2 (1-1, 2-0, 2-1)

This wasn’t just a clash between two leading teams in the Eastern Conference. It was also an intriguing match-up between two coaches whose careers have often been intertwined. Once, Andrei Martemyanov and Nikolai Zavarukhin were colleagues on the staff at Avtomobilist. Later, though, Zavarukhin’s Sibir defeated the Motormen in a playoff series, costing Martemyanov his job. Later, Martemyanov masterminded a victory over Bill Peters’ Avtomobilist that saw Zavarukhin appointed in place of the Canadian. Now Martemyanov is behind the Sibir bench, with Zavarukhin still at the wheel for Avto. Moreover, four ex-Sibir players lined up for Yekaterinburg, with five former Motormen on the Sibir team.

Against that backdrop it was perhaps fitting that three of today’s goals were scored by players up against their former clubs. Vyacheslav Litovchenko was the first ‘old boy’ to find the net, tying the game for Sibir in the seventh minute after Brooks Macek’s early opener gave the home team a great start.

In the second period, Stephane Da Costa restored Avtomobilist’s lead before Oleg Li, who moved from Novosibirsk to Yekaterinburg in the summer, made it 3-1. That goal came on a power play after ex-Avtomobilist forward Taylor Beck sat out a hooking penalty.

Vyacheslav Osnovin gave Sibir some hope midway through the third, but Curtis Valk quickly restored a two-goal advantage for the home team. Then, in the closing moments, yet another former Sibir man made it 5-2. This time Danil Romantsev was on target, potting his second of the season to complete the scoring.

Jaskin shoots down former club

Dynamo Moscow 2 SKA St. Petersburg 3 (1-0, 0-2, 1-1)

SKA reeled off a seventh consecutive victory, defeating its closest rival in the Western Conference for the second time this season. To make the loss even more painful for the home team, the winning goal came from Dmitrij Jaskin, once a hero to Blue-and-White fans.

The 1-4 reverse in Petersburg was Dynamo’s only loss so far this season and the home team wanted to put the record straight here. The Muscovites had the better of the first period and went into the intermission leading by the only goal after Eric O’Dell extended his productive streak to four games.

After the intermission, SKA improved. However, for a long time it could not trouble Dynamo’s composed defense. All of that changed in the space of a minute when two of the visitors’ defensemen – Igor Ozhiganov and Stepan Falkovsky – scored twice on Konstantin Volkov. Prior to that double blast, Volkov had gone 92 minutes, 42 seconds without allowing a goal.

Dynamo hit back at the start of the third thanks to Dmitry Rashevsky. For a time it looked as though the home team would again go in front and Dmitry Nikolayev had to put in some hard work to keep SKA in the game. Against the run of play, Jaskin conjured an improbable winner with seven minutes to play, receiving a pass from Mikhail Vorobyov and, with his back to goal, whipping in a shot that surprised everyone and beat Volkov to win the game.

Foo’s double downs Sochi

Kunlun Red Star 3 HC Sochi 1 (1-0, 0-1, 2-0)

With just one win each in their opening six games, both of these teams were in danger of getting cut adrift at the foot of the Western Conference. Red Star was boosted by the return of defenseman Ryan Sproul, back for a fourth season in the Dragons’ lair. He slotted in for his first appearance in today’s game.

However, the early action was overshadowed by a big fight and Garet Hunt was in the thick of things again. He was fouled by Donat StalnovIvan Lisin jumped in to remonstrate with the Sochi forward and Hunt picked himself up to fight Nikita Zorkin. All four players got major penalties, Stalnov picked up a further 10 minutes as the instigator. Hunt has attracted a major penalty in three of his past four games, underlining his reputation.

Once the dust settled, Red Star took the lead through Ethan Werek’s close-range finish. That was somewhat against the run of play, but when the home team took the initiative in the second period Sochi delivered a similar blow on the counter attack. Dmitry Zavgorodny tied it up late in the frame.

Parker Foo restored the home lead at the start of the third period, and Sochi was unable to find an answer. Foo got a second late on when his clearance bounced into an empty net; Sproul marked his return with an assist on that play as Red Star snapped a five-game skid.

Radulov’s OT winner

Dinamo Minsk 2 Ak Bars Kazan 3 OT (1-0, 1-2, 0-0, 0-1)

Officially, this was a Dinamo home game. However, due to a quirk of the schedule, it was relocated to Kazan where these teams met just four days earlier. On that occasion the visitor won 3-2 in overtime; today the notional ‘visitor’, Ak Bars, repeated that result.

Dinamo took an early lead through Nick Merkley. The Canadian snapped a four-game run without scoring when he struck during a passage of 4-on-4 play. And goals from teams without a full complement of players became a theme of this game.

The second period saw Ak Bars turn things around. Nothing so unusual in that, but Kazan did it with two short-handed goals. Artyom Galimov got the first in the 26th minute then, 10 minutes later, Kirill Petrov put Ak Bars in front. Kirill Semyonov assisted on both markers.

Late in the second period, Dinamo tied it up with a goal from Mark Barberio. The experienced Canadian got his first, brief taste of the KHL with Ak Bars last season. Today he got his first goal for his new club to take the game into overtime.

In the extras, Oleg Znarok pulled off a now-familiar move, withdrawing goalie Timur Bilyalov to play 4-on-3. The gamble worked: Danis Zaripov set up Alexander Radulov for the winning goal to lift Ak Bars to second in the Eastern Conference.

Torpedo edges OT verdict

Spartak Moscow 1 Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod 2 OT (1-0, 0-1, 0-0, 0-1)

Before the season, Igor Larionov said that his Torpedo team had little interest in grinding out low-scoring victories. Today, though, his players proved that they have what it takes to edge those tight verdicts when required.

A trip to Spartak turned into a hard-fought battle, decided in overtime by Kenny Agostino’s first goal of the season. After Alexei Kruchinin’s breakaway missed the target, the American forward exchanged passes with Mikhail Orlov and engineered an open net to shoot into and win the game.

Early in the evening, Spartak took the lead on its first power play of the night. Yu Sato, the KHL’s first Japanese player, was penalized and Joey Keane took advantage to score on the power play. Shane Prince’s screen denied Ivan Kulbakov a good look at the defenseman’s point shot as Keane recorded his first KHL goal.

However, another power play goal brought Torpedo level. Teenage forward Vasily Atanasov has been making waves this season and today he scored his third goal in six games, reacting first to the rebound after Patrik Rybar blocked a Kruchinin shot midway through the second period.

After two power play goals in the first 40 minutes, a steady stream of penalties in the third period suggested that a winning goal was likely before the end of regulation. However, both teams worked hard on the PK and neither side could win it until the extras, when Agostino made the difference for Torpedo.

Source: en.khl.ru

KHL Game Day Round-Up: September 15, 2022

Avangard’s skid continues

A 5-3 loss to Barys saw Avangard’s losing streak extend to six games this season. Despite a third-period rally, the visitor was unable to recover from 1-4 and is still seeking its first win. Elsewhere, it was a good day for goalies with Eddie Pasquale and Nikita Serebryakov recording shut-outs as Metallurg and Admiral defeated Amur and Salavat Yulaev respectively.

Maillet scores twice as Pasquale denies Amur

Amur Khabarovsk 0 Metallurg Magnitogorsk 3 (0-1, 0-1, 0-1)

Eddie Pasquale submitted an early entry for save of the season as Metallurg blanked Amur. The Canadian’s big moment came late in the second period, with the Tigers pressing on a power play. The puck broke for Evgeny Oksentyuk and the young Belarusian forward must have believed he had his first KHL goal when he fired a shot at the open corner of Pasquale’s net. But the netminder was having none of it, pulling off a spectacular glove save to deny the 21-year-old.

That was the pick of Pasquale’s 36 stops and he, along with Philippe Maillet, was the principal architect of this win. Maillet, meanwhile, opened the scoring in the eighth minute after a great feed from Yegor Korobkin and doubled the lead on the power play early in the middle frame. That moves him to five goals for the season, leading his team on that count.

Pasquale’s stop preserved that 2-0 lead for the Steelmen and dealt a big blow to Amur’s hopes of saving the game. In the third period, the visitor had the better of the game and sealed the win with an empty net goal from Denis Zernov.

Serebryakov blanks Ufa

Admiral Vladivostok 2 Salavat Yulaev Ufa 0 (0-0, 2-0, 0-0)

While Metallurg was shutting out Amur, Admiral did the same thing to Salavat Yulaev in Thursday’s other early game. Nikita Serebryakov was the home hero, stopping 32 shots to deny Ufa in this game.

This was the first of two games in Vladivostok for Salavat Yulaev – the teams meet again on Saturday – and it was something of a goaltending duel between Serebryakov and Ilya Ezhov. The first period finished goalless, with the home team having a slightly harder time keeping its goal intact. So when Mark Verba took a major penalty for Admiral midway through the second, it should have been the foundation from which the visitor took control of the game.

This didn’t happen. Ufa moved the puck around nicely but found little end product. Then a too many men call wiped out the power play, and Alexander Chmelevski’s boarding offense had Admiral on the PP. Just as the play got back to 4-on-4, Libor Sulak’s pass found Alexander Gorshkov for the opening goal. Sulak is emerging as the key man on the Admiral PP, and four minutes later he scored himself while Mikhail Naumenkov sat out an interference call.

With a two-goal advantage to defend, Admiral played out a cautious third period. Salavat Yulaev was unable to make inroads and slipped to a fourth loss in six games.

Louis scores twice as Hawks lose again

Barys Nur-Sultan 5 Avangard Omsk 3 (1-0, 1-1, 3-2)

Avangard’s miserable start to the season continued with a sixth successive loss. Today’s reverse in Kazakhstan leaves the Hawks with just one point so far. Only Neftekhimik is similarly poorly-placed, and the Nizhnekamsk team has played one game less.

Barys came into Thursday’s game boosted by its first victory of the season against Traktor. That coincided with the first game of the season in Nur-Sultan, something not lost on Avangard as it continues a long road trip before getting to open its new arena in Omsk on Oct. 1. After today’s game, head coach Dmitry Ryabykin admitted that life on the road was tough for his team.

Ryabykin could also be forgiven for feeling that fortune is against the Hawks right now. In the first period, his players were causing plenty of problems for Barys and there were good chances for Arseny GritsyukNail Yakupov and Vladimir Tkachyov before Sergei Tolchinsky spurned the best look of them all. Nikita Boyarkin did well in the home net … and Barys snatched a lead just before the hooter. The goal went to Ansar Shaikhmeddenov, a youngster listed as the 13th forward, who scored his first in the KHL.

The home team looked good for much of the second period, and extended its lead through Anthony Louis in the 36th minute. Tkachyov struck back six seconds before the break, though, giving Avangard hope of saving the game.

Two goals in 90 seconds early in the third effectively extinguished that hope. Louis assisted as Ivan Mishchenko made it 3-1, then Linden Vey added a fourth. Avangard tried to fight back and strikes from Tolchinsky and Vladimir Bryukvin set up a tense finale. However, the task was too big for the visitor and Louis wrapped up it with an empty net goal to prolong Avangard’s problems. The teams meet again tomorrow, with the Hawks looking for a win at the seventh attempt.

Source: en.khl.ru