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Other International Stars
Alexander Almetov
Russia
Another early Soviet hockey star that is long forgotten is
Alexander Almetov. One of the reasons he is long forgotten
is very few North Americans knew much of him when he
actually player. Some Europeans may remember better, but
his contributions in Russia will always be remembered.
Almetov, like most Russians, was a well trained forward
when it came to skating, puckhandling and passing, though
he was never an elite scoring threat. Part of that was
because Almetov was a superior defensive forward. In fact
he was a mainstay on the Russian penalty killing units
perhaps the best PK man they ever had.
Anatoli Tarasov wrote the following in his book Road to
Olympus:
Perhaps sports fans who have seen our national team in
action have noticed that whenever we have one man short,
Alexander Almetov is sure to appear on the ice. When it
comes to individual play, a question of holding on to the
puck and beating off a superior force, Almetov is in a
class by himself! He is not a solist, he is a star in the
good sense of the word.
Almetov was a regular linemate of Konstantin Loktev and
Venyamin Alexandrov. Those three formed the second great
troika in Soviet hockey history as they succeeded Babich,
Shuvalov and Bobrov. All three are Merited Masters of
Sport in Russia (the equivalent of a Hall of Fame).
Together the trio earned three Olympic championships, as
well as neck-full of World and European championship gold
medals.
Almetov was the center of the unit. When first paired with
his two mates, Loktev and Alexandrov pleaded with their
coach for a different center, as they were weary of his
level of play. While Almetov's skill level may not have
been on par with the other two, he complimented the line
very well.
Almetov's strong point, according to coach Tarasov, was
much like that of Wayne Gretzky. Gretzky wasn't even born
when Almetov joined the Russian national team mind you,
but the two shared an uncanny knack of always being at the
right place at the right time. Tarasov actually compared
him to a chess player, who plans out an attack before the
play even begins. This is why Almetov almost always led an
attack.
Despite his penalty killing forte and the fact that he
occasionally played defense when there was injury to a
blueliner in the middle of the game, many critics
suggested Almetov was a poor defensive forward 5 on 5. He
was slow to comeback and help out defensively, even lazy
they said. Tarasov seemed unconcerned however.
"Is this a drawback? Relatively speaking - yes. But
if we take into consideration the peculiarities of this
master's game, the tactics of the whole line - no. That is
the Almetov style of playing hockey, that is his manner
and if he changed it, Soviet hockey would doubtlessly lose
of one of its best forwards.
Career Statistics
Born: 1/18/1940, Moscow, USSR.
Died: 1992
Height: 5'10" Weight: 185lbs
Position: Center Shoots: Right
Career Notes: 1 Olympic Gold Medal, 5 World Championship Gold Medals
| Season |
Club |
League |
GP |
G |
A |
Pts |
PIM |
| 1958-59 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
8 |
- |
8 |
- |
| 1959-60 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
16 |
- |
16 |
- |
| 1960-61 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
21 |
- |
21 |
- |
| 1961-62 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
29 |
- |
29 |
- |
| 1962-63 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
23 |
- |
23 |
- |
| 1963-64 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
40 |
- |
40 |
- |
| 1964-65 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
26 |
- |
26 |
- |
| 1965-66 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
24 |
- |
24 |
- |
| 1966-67 |
CSKA Moscow |
USSR |
- |
1 |
- |
1 |
- |
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