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Sergei Viktorovich Fyodorov (Серге́й Викторович Фёдоров; born December 13, 1969) is a Russian former professional ice hockey player and the former head coach of CSKA Moscow of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) from 2021 to 2024. [1]
New York Rangers [24] Points Carl Liscombe Don Grosso Billy Taylor 7 November 5, 1942 vs. New York Rangers February 3, 1944 vs. New York Rangers March 16, 1947 at Chicago Black Hawks [24] Points, one period Joe Carveth Mickey Redmond John Ogrodnick Steve Yzerman Sergei Fedorov Doug Brown Henrik Zetterberg 4 January 23, 1944 vs. New York Rangers
The Red Wings made the Finals for the second time in three years, while the Flyers were making their first appearance in a decade. The Red Wings swept the Flyers to win the Stanley Cup for the eighth time in franchise history and for the first time since 1955, ending what was the longest Stanley Cup drought in the league at that time.
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 ...
Sergei Fedorov won 3 Stanley Cups with the Wings; he coached in Russia in 2021-22.
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.
However, the Red Wings were fighting to stay alive and tied the game on Sergei Fedorov's goal just 55 seconds later. Coffey scored a shorthanded goal at 13:01 to give Detroit a 2–1 lead. New Jersey responded less than five minutes later, at 17:45 on a slap-shot goal by Shawn Chambers that beat Mike Vernon glove-side.
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 ...