| SKA-Neva СКА-Нева | |
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| City | Saint Petersburg, Russia |
|---|---|
| League | VHL 2010-present
|
| Conference | Western |
| Home arena | Yubileyny Sports Palace |
| Colors | |
| Head coach | |
| Affiliate(s) | SKA Saint Petersburg (KHL) SKA-1946 (MHL) SKA-Serebryanye Lvy (MHL) SKA-Varyagi (NMHL) |
| Franchise history | |
| 2008-2013 | VMF St. Petersburg |
| 2013-2014 | VMF Karelia |
| 2014-2015 | SKA-Karelia |
| 2015–present | SKA-Neva |
HC SKA-Neva (Russian: Хоккейный Клуб СКА-Нева) is a Russian professional ice hockey team playing in the VHL, the second level of Russian ice hockey. The club was founded as VMF St. Petersburg in 2008 in Saint Petersburg as a farm club of the KHL team SKA Saint Petersburg. After failing to attract the audience in Petersburg, the franchise was relocated to Kondopoga, Karelia during the 2012-2013 VHL season. Starting with the 2013-14 season, the team officially changed the name to VMF Karelia. On Season 2014-2015, it was changed to SKA-Karelia. In May 2015, the club returned to Saint Petersburg and was renamed SKA-Neva[1]
References[]
- ↑ Клуб «СКА-Карелия» получит новое имя и переедет в Санкт-Петербург. karelia.ru. Retrieved on 2017-11-23.
External links[]
- Official site (in Russian)
| Supreme Hockey League | |
|---|---|
| Teams (2022-23) | AKM - Bars Kazan - Buran Voronezh - Chelmet Chelyabinsk - CSK VVS Samara - HC Dinamo Saint Petersburg - Dizel Penza - HC Gornyak Uchaly - Izhstal Izhevsk -Khimik Voskresensk - Lada Tolyatti - Metallurg Novokuznetsk - Molot-Prikamie Perm - Neftyanik Almetyevsk - HC Rostov - Gazovik Tyumen - HC Ryazan - SKA-Neva - Sokol Krasnoyarsk- HC Tambov - Toros Neftekamsk - Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod - Yermak Angarsk - Yugra Khanty-Mansiysk - Yuzhny Ural Orsk - Zauralie Kurgan - HC Zvezda Moscow |
| VL seasons | 1992–93 - 1993–94 - 1994–95 - 1995–96 - 1996–97 - 1997–98 - 1998–99 - 1999–2000 - 2000–01 - 2001–02 - 2002–03 - 2003–04 - 2004–05 - 2005–06 - 2006–07 - 2007–08 - 2008–09 - 2009–10 |
| VHL seasons | 2010–11 - 2011–12 - 2012–13 - 2013–14 - 2014–15 - 2015–16 - 2016–17 - 2017–18 - 2018–19 - 2019–20 - 2020–21 - 2021–22 - 2022–23 |
| Related articles | Russian Superleague (top-level, 1996–2008) - Kontinental Hockey League (top-level, from 2008) - Petrov Cup (trophy for the winner) |
| This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at SKA-Neva. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA). |
