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Steve Yzerman, speaking to a reporter on Fedorov a few weeks after turning the tide on a January 30 game that season that ended in a 4–2 victory for the Red Wings over the Toronto Maple Leafs, said, "Sergei is a game-breaker for us anytime he's on the ice ... He's the most talented player I've ever seen."
The Russian Five was the nickname given to the unit of five Russian ice hockey players from the Soviet Union that played for the Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League in the 1990s. The five players were Sergei Fedorov, Vladimir Konstantinov, Slava Kozlov, Slava Fetisov, and Igor Larionov. Three of the players were drafted by the Red ...
Sergei Fedorov Sergei Fedorov Chris Chelios Nicklas Lidstrom Todd Bertuzzi: 4 April 5, 1955 vs. Montreal Canadiens April 23, 1996 vs. Winnipeg Jets May 23, 1996 vs. Colorado Avalanche April 27, 2002 at Vancouver Canucks April 21, 2007 vs. Calgary May 6, 2010 vs. San Jose Sharks [26] Assists, one period Alex Delvecchio Vyacheslav Kozlov Chris ...
Sergei Fedorov won 3 Stanley Cups with the Wings; he coached in Russia in 2021-22.
The Red Wings won 5–4 in overtime. Fedorov's fifth goal of the game came at 2:39 of the overtime period. On February 8, 1997, coach Scotty Bowman achieved his 1000th victory as an NHL head coach against his previous team, the Pittsburgh Penguins. On March 26, 1997, the Red Wings–Avalanche brawl continued to fuel the rivalry between the ...
The Detroit Red Wings had to wait a bit to learn who they'd play next beating the St. Louis Blues in the 1997 first round. Road to Stanleytown: Sergei Fedorov finds stride, 1997 Detroit Red Wings ...
The Red Wings matched the offer on February 26, 1998, ending Fedorov's holdout. The offer broke down as: $14 million for signing, $2 million for 21 regular season games and $12 million for the team reaching conference finals. $28 million for 43 total games in 1997–98 is the largest single season amount paid to an NHL athlete.
Newsy Lalonde, the first player to score six goals in an NHL game, also had two other five-goal games. Wayne Gretzky, the NHL's all-time leading scorer, had four five-goal games. Mario Lemieux recorded four five-goal games. Sergei Fedorov scored all of the Red Wings' goals in a 5–4 overtime win against the Washington Capitals.