Ice Hockey - Team ROC

Ice Hockey

Number Name Height Date of Birth
2 178 cm 23 May 1994
4 163 cm 8 May 1998
10 170 cm 12 Aug 1994
11 165 cm 20 Dec 1997
12 178 cm 8 Jun 1992
13 173 cm 26 Jan 1999
15 178 cm 15 Apr 1995
17 161 cm 6 Apr 1998
18 163 cm 27 Jul 1992
19 165 cm 22 Nov 2001
21 167 cm 6 Feb 1999
22 173 cm 3 May 1996
23 176 cm 23 Mar 2004
26 159 cm 10 Dec 1999
27 168 cm 9 Jun 2003
29 164 cm 28 Jul 1990
30 168 cm 20 Sep 1999
42 165 cm 5 Jun 2000
59 159 cm 8 Nov 1995
69 166 cm 19 Aug 1995
70 163 cm 10 Nov 1994
72 163 cm 5 Dec 2001
73 170 cm 12 Aug 1999
76 165 cm 5 Oct 1995
79 158 cm 31 Aug 1998
87 167 cm 30 Jan 2002
97 168 cm 23 Jun 1997

Team Officials

Function Name
Head Coach
Assistant Coach
KUSAKIN AKUSAKIN Alexei
Assistant Coach
SHCHERBAKOV YSHCHERBAKOV Yevgeni
Assistant Coach
VOROBYOV MVOROBYOV Mikhail
Technical Official
RUS
PRODAN VPRODAN Vladislav
Equipment Manager
Doctor
Physiotherapist

Events and Medals

Discipline Event Rank
IHO Ice Hockey Women 5

Schedule

Start Time Location Event Status
National Indoor Stadium
ROC
ROC
5
SUI
Switzerland
2
Finished
Wukesong Sports Centre
USA
United States
5
ROC
ROC
0
Finished
Wukesong Sports Centre
ROC
ROC
1
CAN
Canada
6
Finished
National Indoor Stadium
FIN
Finland
5
ROC
ROC
0
Finished
Wukesong Sports Centre
ROC
ROC
2
SUI
Switzerland
4
Finished

Biographical Information

Highlights

:

Historical Results

Women's World Championship
RankYearLocation
52021Calgary, AB, CAN
:

The Big Red Machine

General Interest

OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES
Russian Federation made their debut at Salt Lake City 2002, finishing fifth after defeating Germany in a playoff (5-0). Went on to contest the fifth-place game at the next three tournaments, losing at in 2006 and 2010 in a shootout to Germany (1-0) and Switzerland (2-1) respectively.

After being disqualified at Sochi 2014 due to doping, the Russian team competed at PyeongChang 2018 as Olympic Athletes from Russia and went on to record their best result finishing fourth. Defeating Switzerland 6-2 in the quarterfinals, they lost 5-0 to Canada in the semi-finals, before a 3-2 loss to Finland in the bronze medal game.

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS
Making their debut in 1997, the Russian team has contested the bronze medal game six times, winning on three occasions (2001, 2013, 2016). After losing bronze to Finland in overtime in 2011, the two nations squared off in three consecutive bronze medal games from 2013-16, with each team winning one before a shootout decided the 2016 medal in the Russians favour.

Finished fifth at the 2021 World Championship in Calgary, after losing in overtime to Switzerland in the quarterfinals. After ROC scored opened with two goals in the first 10 minutes, the Swiss scored two goals in the last 10 minutes to draw level. Though halfway into extra-time Laura Zimmermann (SUI) broke the deadlock. ROC subsequently defeated Germany (3-2) and Japan (2-0) in the classification games.

QUALIFICATION
ROC qualified for Beijing 2022 after Russian Federation finished fourth in qualification seeding, following the cancelled 2020 World Championships in Canada.

2021 World Ranking: 4th (2985 points)

OLYMPIC RECORD
8 wins, 1 overtime loss, 18 losses

vs. Canada (0 wins, 4 losses)
vs. Czech Republic (Olympic debut)
vs. Denmark (Olympic debut)
vs. Finland (0 wins, 3 losses, 1 other)
vs. Japan (0 wins, 0 losses, 2 others)
vs. People's Republic of China (2 wins, 0 losses)
vs. Sweden (0 wins, 2 losses, 1 other)
vs. Switzerland (2 wins, 1 loss, 1 other)
vs. United States (0 wins, 2 losses)

Note: Record includes Russian Federation and Olympic Athletes from Russia

© Data by Sports Data Warehouse

Legend
#:
Game
Timing and scoring provided by OMEGA. Results powered by Atos