HC Košice

HC Košice
Nickname Oceliari
City Košice, Slovakia
League Tipsport Liga
Founded 1962 as Dukla Košice (1962 as Dukla Košice)
Home arena Steel Arena
(capacity 8,378)
Colours Dark blue, white, orange
              
General manager Slovakia Rastislav Rusič
Head coach Czech Republic Roman Šimíček
Captain Slovakia Ladislav Nagy
Website www.hckosice.sk

Hockey Club Košice is a professional ice hockey team playing in the Slovak Extraliga and is the most successful hockey team in Slovakia and the former of Czechoslovakia. The team is nicknamed Oceliari, which means Steelers in English.

History

The club existed since 1962, when it was established as an army hockey team named TJ Dukla Košice. At that time, there were two weak regional ice hockey clubs in Košice. The new club was pretty mighty and within two years it joined the Supreme Czechoslovak League.

In 1966 Dukla accepted a new name TJ VSŽ Košice. Twenty years later, in 1986, the club became, for the first time, the Ice Hockey Champion of Czechoslovakia (beat HC Dukla Jihlava in finals). In 1988, TJ VSŽ Košice obtained its second lead - in finals beat HC Sparta Prague. At that time, the team of VSŽ Košice was the second best ice hockey team in Europe after legendary CSKA Moscow (The European Cup 1987 and 1989).

Former logo of HC Košice (until 1998)

In 1992, the federal Czechoslovak parliament decided to split country into two independent states – the Czech Republic and Slovakia, as of January 1, 1993. As a Slovak team, VSŽ Košice became a member of Supreme Slovak Hockey Ligue – Slovak Extraliga, and in the next years obtained three titles of Slovak hockey champion.

In 1998, the club changed name again. Hockey Club (HC) Košice removed to Lokomotíva Košice Stadium because of the Steel Aréna – Košice‘s L. Troják Stadium construction. The new home arena of HC Košice was open on February 24, 2006. It is named in honour of the general sponsor of HC Košice – the U. S. Steel Košice (a member of the United States Steel Corporation, U.S.) and legendary Košice‘s ice hockey player Ladislav Troják.

2009 Slovnaft Extraliga champions beating HK 36 Skalica 4–2 with Košice goaltender Július Hudáček saving Skalica's legend Žigmund Pálffy three shots in the shootout of the sixth game to secure victory.

2010 Slovnaft Extraliga Champions for the 2nd year in a row and the 5th time in total, beating HC Slovan Bratislava 4-2. Július Hudáček was again the hero of the final series with save after save, although the final goal was fittingly scored by Vlado Dravecký.

2011 Slovnaft Extraliga Champions for the 3rd year in a row (the first "golden hat trick" in the Slovnaft Extraliga history) and the 6th time in total, beating HK Poprad 4-1 in finals. Július Hudáček again was the player of the series along with captain Peter Bartos.

3 May 2011 - Rostislav Čada resigns as manager to join Avangard Omsk in the KHL.

2012 Košice lost 4-3 in games in the Play Off final Against Slovan, due to an extra time goal from Libor Hudacek, brother of Kosice's former goalie.

2013 Košice qualify for their 6th finals in a row where they played Zvolen, finally losing 4-1. Although scoring as many goals during the final series and winners Zvolen.

2014 Košice win the Slovak championship for the seventh time. Košice beat Nitra 4-3 after winning the seventh final game 6-0 at the Steel Arena.

Honours

Champions

Runners-up

International

Current roster

Updated September 8, 2018.[1]

# Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
51 Czech Republic Vladislav Habal G R 27 2016 Sokolov, Czech Republic
71 Slovakia Eduard Šedivý D L 26 2015 Myjava, Slovakia
79 Finland Jere Pulli D L 27 2017 Lappeenranta, Finland
30 Slovakia Stanislav Škorvánek G L 22 2017 Žilina, Slovakia
2 Czech Republic Martin Dudáš D L 31 2015 Ostrava, Czech Republic
44 Slovakia Gabriel Spilar RW R 37 2018 Košice, Slovakia
27 Slovakia Ladislav Nagy LW L 39 2016 Šaca, Slovakia
70 Czech Republic Václav Čížek D R 29 2017 Buranovice, Czech Republic
64 Slovakia Patrik Koch D L 21 2016 Bratislava, Slovakia
74 Slovakia Christian Michalčin D R 22 2014 Košice, Slovakia
10 Slovakia Jakub Suja RW L 29 2015 Prešov, Slovakia
14 Slovakia Tomáš Hričina F L 28 2015 Košice, Slovakia
85 Slovakia Tomáš Klíma C L 28 2016 Ilava, Slovakia
22 Slovakia Dávid Šoltés RW R 23 2015 Košice, Slovakia
83 Slovakia Šimon Petráš RW L 22 2017 Bratislava, Slovakia
17 Czech Republic Tomáš Netík LW L 36 2018 Praha, Czech Republic
86 Slovakia Filip Vrábeľ LW L 22 2016 Košice, Slovakia
24 Slovakia Filip Hudák C R 20 2017 Snina, Slovakia
87 Slovakia Marcel Haščák RW R 31 2018 Poprad, Slovakia
53 Slovenia Klemen Pretnar D R 32 2018 Bled, Slovenia
53 United States Jimmy McDowell D R 25 2018 Dimondale, MI, USA
47 Canada Evan Brophey C L 31 2018 Kitchener, ON, Canada

NHL alumni

Notable players

References

  1. "Team – HC Košice". www.hckosice.sk. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
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