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Kharlamov Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Kharlamov Cup (Russian: Кубок Харламова, Kubok Kharlamova) is the trophy presented to the winner of the Russian Junior Hockey League (MHL) playoffs, and is named after ice hockey player Valeri Kharlamov, considered to be one of the greatest ice hockey players of the World.[1]

The cup was designed by Frank Meisler.[2]

Cup winners

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Key to colors
     Game played on eventual playoffs winner's home ice
     Game played on eventual playoffs runner up's home ice
W Western Conference member
E Eastern Conference member
Season Playoffs winner Playoffs runner up Playoffs final series score Game scores Series-winning goal scorer
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
2009-10 E Steel Foxes E Kuznetsk Bears 3–1 5 – 3 4 – 3 0 – 2 3 – 2 Bogdan Potekhin (34:06)
2010-11 W Red Army E Steel Foxes 4–0 3 – 2 OT 3 – 0 4 – 3 4 – 3 OT Vyacheslav Kulemin (62:10)
2011-12 E Omsk Hawks W Red Army 4–1 5 – 2 5 – 3 1 – 3 2 – 1 OT 3 – 1 Dmitry Kuzmenko (38:10)
2012-13 E Omsk Hawks W MHC Spartak 4–3 2 – 0 6 – 2 2 – 4 2 – 4 0 – 1 6 – 1 3 – 2 OT Kirill Rasskazov (63:11)
2013-14 W MHC Spartak W Red Army 4–3 4 – 1 0 – 7 1 – 3 4 – 3 OT 2 – 0 1 – 2 OT 3 – 2 Ilya Pavlyukov (51:03)
2014-15 E Chaika W SKA-1946 4–1 8 – 0 4 – 1 3 – 1 1 – 4 2 – 0 Ilya Yamkin (59:34)
2015-16 W Loko E Chaika 4–1 4 – 1 1 – 2 OT 4 – 2 4 – 1 6 – 3 Yegor Korshkov (59:37)
2016-17 W Red Army E Reaktor 4–0 7 – 4 6 – 1 7 – 2 2 – 1 Ivan Silayev (45:04)
2017-18[3] E Loko W SKA-1946 4–2 1 – 0 3 – 2 3 – 2 1 – 0 2 – 1 7 – 3 Danil Gizatullin (37:05)
2018-19[4] E Loko W Avto 4–3 4 – 2 3 – 2 1 – 0 2 – 1 2 – 1 3 – 2 1 – 0 Maxim Denezhkin (23:44)
2019-20 Cancelled due to COVID-19[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Mosko, Alexey (2013-05-11). "Film brings Soviet hockey legend to life". Russia: Beyond the Headlines. Archived from the original on 2013-08-25. Retrieved 2014-01-22.
  2. ^ "Кубок Харламова". MHL.KHL.RU. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  3. ^ "Lokomotiv's Youngsters Come Through". conwaysrussianhockey.wordpress.com. April 25, 2018. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  4. ^ "Loko!". conwaysrussianhockey.wordpress.com. April 25, 2019. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
  5. ^ "Looking Ahead in the KHL". conwaysrussianhockey.wordpress.com. March 3, 2020. Retrieved October 15, 2020.
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