|
|
|
|
Anatoli Tarasov Anatoli Vladimirovitch Tarasov
is regarded as the architect of the Soviet Union's hockey power. Yet he
alienated the Soviet hockey higher-ups enough to land him in hot water
several times, including for the 1972 Summit Series.
Tarasov was a product of
Soviet hockey himself. He was a workmanlike winger who was overshadowed
by the flashy Vsevolod Bobrov. Tarasov lacked Bobrov's natural skill,
but made up for with an incredible understanding of the game and a
willingness to experiment.
The two would continue their
mostly friendly rivalry for years off the ice as well. Both became
successful head coaches. Tarasov coached his country's national team to
nine straight world amateur championships and three consecutive Olympic
titles before he retired after his team's gold win at Sapporo in 1972.
He was the undisputed king of Soviet hockey until he was abruptly
unseated shortly after the 1972 Olympic win and shortly before the 1972
Summit Series showdown with the Canadians. He was replaced by Bobrov.
But why?
According to Lawrence Martin's
book The Red Machine, the final straw between Tarasov and the political
bosses he answered to. Tarasov, with a history of insubordination if he
felt it was beneficial for the team, clashed with the head of the Soviet
Sports Committee, a fellow named Mr. Pavlov, over money accepted from
the Japanese. The Japanese offered Soviet players $200 a piece to play 2
exhibition games prior to the Olympics. This of course was very
unacceptable in the Communist world. Pavlov, who was closely monitored
by the Kremlin, was furious.
Following the Olympics
Tarasov, and his national team assistant coach Arkady Chernyshov,
asked for time off to rest from the rigors of coaching. Pavlov agreed,
but gave them both a permanent break. In essence they were fired from
the national team. Tarasov was replaced by the skating legend Bobrov
behind the bench.
Initially it looked like a bad
move for the Soviets. Bobrov led them to the silver medal in the World
Championships. For most nations that would be a major accomplishment but
that marked the first time the Soviets had finished without the gold in
a decade. To make matters worse key players Anatoli Firsov and
Vitaly Davydov protested by not playing for the national team.
Bobrov ultimately wouldn't
last long. He relaxed the stringent and rigid game Tarasov had preached
and was so successful with. The players quickly grew to appreciate the
freedom and responsibility, and it showed in the performance at the 1972
Summit Series. However the political bosses would favour a young up and
coming coach named Viktor Tikhonov
He disappeared
from hockey after his dismissal. He continued to coach the Red Army club
team until 1974 and supervised
the Soviet Gold Puck tournament for boys. More than 1,000,000 youngsters
were registered for the various youth competitions.
Tarasov also travelled the
world attending seminars and making personal appearances. In 1987 he served as a coaching
consultant to the NHL's Vancouver Canucks during training camp.
|
|