4 November 2024
This week the Dragons go off in search of revenge. Our latest home stand kicks off with games against two teams that handed us recent heavy losses – but against which we also have recent victories to celebrate. Then we face Spartak for the first time this season, looking to build on a 5-3 win last time the Red-and-Whites came to Mytishchi.
SKA St. Petersburg (h), Nov. 4, 1700 Moscow Time
Last time out: Do we have to talk about that one? Instead of recalling a 0-8 home loss, let’s think happier thoughts. Like a spectacular 5-4 win in Petersburg at the end of September, probably our best performance of the season.
Familiar faces: Three of the Dragons could face their former club. Nail Yakupov’s 111 games for SKA make him the most significant ex-factor. Defenseman Yury Pautov had a short spell in Petersburg in 2021/22, while goalie Konstantin Volkov began his career there but didn’t get on the ice in the KHL.
Setting the scene: We’re not the only team to have suffered against SKA this term. Roman Rotenberg’s stacked roster is full of goals and has plundered 94 in 23 games. That’s head and shoulders above the rest of the league: Torpedo, the second highest scorer, has 77, modest by comparison. SKA has scored eight on three occasions this season, two of them coming in run of five games that produced 5+ goals. Yet, while offense wins games, defense tends to win championships. And that could be SKA’s Achilles Heel. The Petersburg club has allowed more goals than Sochi, currently at the foot of the Western Conference. That’s possibly why, for all the firepower in the Northern capital, Lokomotiv enjoys a commanding lead in the standings.
Severstal Cherepovets (h), Nov. 8, 1930 Moscow Time
Last time out: Allowing a goal after seven seconds rather summed up this one. It mostly got worse from there, but Ian McCoshen’s first KHL goal was a Red Star highlight in a 2-7 loss. We prefer to recall our 3-0 win in Cherepovets three weeks earlier.
Familiar faces: As before, Severstal’s Alexei Kruchinin is the only ex-Dragon involved in this one.
Setting the scene: Andrei Kozyrev’s Severstal could prove to be the dark horse of the West this season. At times his team has been as high as third in the standings and when the offense fires it can hurt any opponent. Much like last season, Kirill Pilipenko and Danil Aimurzin pose the biggest threat and we saw that first-hand in last week’s…
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