2009–10 KHL season


The 2009–10 KHL season was the second season of the Kontinental Hockey League. It was held from 10 September 2009 to 27 April 2010, with a break for the Olympic winter games from 8 February to 3 March. Ak Bars Kazan defended their title by defeating Western conference winners HC MVD in a seven-game play-off final.

League changes

On 16 June 2009, the KHL Board of Directors approved several changes to the league for the 2009–10 season.
; Team changes
The league admitted a new team, Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg. Khimik Voskresensk did not play in the 2009–10 season due to financial problems, but they retained KHL membership and may return at a later date, meanwhile playing in the Russian Major League. Overall, the number of teams playing in 2009–10 remained at 24.
; Division realignment
Teams were geographically aligned to aid travel conditions. The league were divided into a Western and an Eastern conference, each containing two divisions of six teams. Each team played the other teams in the same division 4 times and each team in the other divisions 2 times. The regular season thus consisted of 56 games for every team.
; Play-off structure
The top eight teams from each conference qualified for the play-offs. Division winners were awarded the top two seeds.
In each conference quarterfinals, semifinals and finals will be played and the conference winners play for the Gagarin Cup. Conference quarterfinals were best-of-five series, the remaining rounds best-of-seven series. Overtime periods last 20 minutes or until the sudden death goal.
; Salary cap
The aggregate income of all players of a team was limited to 620 million rubles. Minimum aggregate salary for the players was 200 million rubles. Each teams was allowed one "franchise player" exception, who did not count towards the cap.
; Rosters
25 players are allowed to be in the major team roster and 25 in the junior team roster of every club. The number of foreign players is restricted to 5, at most one of them as goaltender.
; Junior league
The league implemented a more advanced and organized junior hockey sub-league to focus on development. It features players from 17 to 21 years of age.
; Entry draft
On 1 June 2009, the inaugural entry draft for the KHL was held. Each team's hockey school was able to protect 25 players from the 17-21 agegroup prior to the draft.
;Goal crease
Goal crease was shrunk to the NHL dimensions.

Regular season

The regular season started on 10 September 2009 with the "Opening Cup" and ended on 7 March 2010. A few small breaks for the national team and the All-Star game as well as a large break for the Olympic winter games from 8 February to 3 March were scheduled. Each team played a total of 56 games. The winner of the regular season was awarded the Continental Cup.

Notable events

Opening Cup
The first game of each KHL season is the "Opening Cup" played between the two finalists of the last season. In 2009, the game was played at the TatNeft Arena in Kazan and won by last year's champion Ak Bars Kazan, beating runner-up Lokomotiv Yaroslavl 3–2 in overtime. The two teams were wearing special uniforms with an Opening Cup logo.
Fetisov comeback
On 11 December 2009, Russian hockey legend Viacheslav Fetisov gave a one-game comeback in professional hockey at the age of 51. In this game for CSKA Moscow he played for 8 minutes without a shot on the goal, but it created a very large media interest, not only for himself but also for CSKA Moscow and the KHL.
Mass brawl in Chekhov
On 9 January 2010, in the game between Vityaz Chekhov and Avangard Omsk, a bench-clearing brawl broke out in the 4th minute of the first period, and a bench- and penalty-box-clearing brawl broke out 39 seconds later, forcing the officials to abandon the game, since only four players were left to play. Thirty-three players and both teams' coaches were ejected, and a world record total of 707 penalty minutes were incurred. The KHL imposed fines totaling 5.7 million rubles, suspended seven players, and counted the game as a 5–0 defeat for both teams, with no points being awarded.
All-Star Game
The 2nd KHL All-star game was played on 30 January 2010 in the new Minsk-Arena in Minsk, Belarus. As in the previous year, Team Jágr won against Team Yashin, this time with a score of 11–8.
Continental Cup
The first Continental Cup in the KHL history was won by Salavat Yulaev Ufa on 5 March 2010, after the club became unreachable by other clubs in the KHL standings one game before the end of the regular season, and extended their regular-season winning streak to three.

League standings

Source: khl.ru
Points are awarded as follows:
Division winner
Qualified for playoffs

Conference standings

The conference standings will determine the seedings for the play-offs. The first two places in each conference are reserved for the division leaders.
Western ConferenceGPWOTWSOWSOLOTLLGFGAPts
SKA Saint Petersburg5636133310192118122
HC MVD5630106415160135102
Dynamo Moscow5628234316166151101
Atlant Moscow Oblast5624491216173137101
Lokomotiv Yaroslavl562632441716313296
Spartak Moscow562444402017816892
CSKA Moscow562235412114813587
Dinamo Riga562313432217417584
Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod562211142715416375
Severstal Cherepovets561627622315116274
Dinamo Minsk561715203113916465
Vityaz Chekhov5613322333114212161541

Eastern ConferenceGPWOTWSOWSOLOTLLGFGAPts
Salavat Yulaev Ufa563743318215116129
Metallurg Magnitogorsk5634241015167111115
Ak Bars Kazan562544321815912896
Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk562731402117616693
Avangard Omsk5624226418115211281901
Barys Astana562051612316917379
Traktor Chelyabinsk561803223113719264
Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg561426242812715964
Sibir Novosibirsk561525313014719063
Amur Khabarovsk561236422912918760
Lada Togliatti561402633111517355
Metallurg Novokuznetsk561312253310515952

1 The KHL decided that as a result of the game between Vityaz Chekhov and Avangard Omsk on 9 January 2010 being abandoned due to a mass brawl which left neither team having the required number of players to continue, the game would count as a 5-0 defeat for both teams with no points being awarded.

Divisional standings

Western Conference
Bobrov DivisionGPWOTWSOWSOLOTLLGFGAPts
SKA Saint Petersburg5636133310192118122
Dynamo Moscow5628234316166151101
HC Spartak Moscow562444402017816892
CSKA Moscow562235412114813587
Dinamo Riga562313432217417584
Dinamo Minsk561715203113916465

Tarasov DivisionGPWOTWSOWSOLOTLLGFGAPts
HC MVD5630106415160135102
Atlant Moscow Oblast5624491216173137101
Lokomotiv Yaroslavl562632441716313296
Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod562211142715416375
Severstal Cherepovets561627622315116274
Vityaz Chekhov561332233314221654

Eastern Conference
Kharlamov DivisionGPWOTWSOWSOLOTLLGFGAPts
Metallurg Magnitogorsk5634241015167111115
Ak Bars Kazan562544321815912896
Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk562731402117616693
Traktor Chelyabinsk561803223113719264
Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg561426242812715964
Lada Togliatti561402633111517355

Chernyshev DivisionGPWOTWSOWSOLOTLLGFGAPts
Salavat Yulaev Ufa563743318215116129
Avangard Omsk562422641815212890
Barys Astana562051612316917379
Sibir
Novosibirsk
561525313014719063
Amur Khabarovsk561236422912918760
Metallurg Novokuznetsk561312253310515952

League leaders

Source: khl.ru
Goals Marcel Hossa 35
Assists Alexei Yashin 46
Points Sergei Mozyakin
66
Shots on goal Marcel Hossa 216
Plus/minus Patrick Thoresen +45
Penalty minutes Darcy Verot 374
Wins Robert Esche 29
Goals against average Petri Vehanen 1.73
Save percentage Petri Vehanen 93.5
Shutouts Vasily Koshechkin 8

Goaltenders: minimum 20 games played

Scoring leaders

Source: khl.ru
GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/– = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes
PlayerTeamGPGAPts+/–PIM
Atlant Moscow Oblast56273966+2444
SKA Saint Petersburg56273865+2887
SKA Saint Petersburg56184664+2138
Salavat Yulaev Ufa54243963+4462
Dynamo Moscow56263460+1036
Salavat Yulaev Ufa56243357+4571
Dinamo Riga56351954–344
Dynamo Moscow54193554+7115
Spartak Moscow56183654–418
Salavat Yulaev Ufa47173653+2483

Leading goaltenders

Source: khl.ru
GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SOL = Shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average
PlayerTeamGPMinWLSOLGASOSV%GAA
Petri VehanenAk Bars Kazan251528:581555443.9351.73
Alexander YeremenkoSalavat Yulaev Ufa321769:552450522.9311.76
Ilya ProskuryakovMetallurg Magnitogorsk321809:311984584.9271.92
Vasily KoshechkinMetallurg Magnitogorsk492840:4325168938.9331.96
Michael GarnettHC MVD442561:5424154885.9172.06

Playoffs

The eight best teams of each conference qualified for the playoffs. The first three rounds are played within the conferences, then the two winners will play in the Gagarin Cup final. The playoffs started on 10 March 2010 and ended on 27 April with the seventh game of the Gagarin Cup final. Remarkably, each of all the fifteen play-off series was won by the team which won the first game in the series.

Playoff leaders

Source: khl.ru
Goals Alexei Ugarov 9
Assists Alexander Radulov
Alexei Tsvetkov
11
Points Alexander Radulov
19
Shots on goal Martin Štrbák 63
Plus/minus Josef Vašíček
+15
Penalty minutes Dmitri Kalinin 58
Wins Petri Vehanen
15
Goals against average Ivan Kasutin
1.36
Save percentage Ivan Kasutin
95.5
Shutouts Ivan Kasutin
Petri Vehanen
Dimitri Kotschnew
2

Goaltenders: minimum 5 games played

Scoring leaders

Source: khl.ru

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/– = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes
PlayerTeamGPGAPts+/–PIM
Alexander RadulovSalavat Yulaev Ufa1681119+710
Niko KapanenAk Bars Kazan228917+36
Alexei TsvetkovHC MVD2251116+614
Alexander GalimovLokomotiv Yaroslavl168614+433
Patrick ThoresenSalavat Yulaev Ufa155914+337

Leading goaltenders

Source: khl.ru
GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average
PlayerTeamGPMinWLGASOSV%GAA
Ivan KasutinNeftekhimik Nizhnekamsk9528:5854122.9541.36
Petri VehanenAk Bars Kazan221388:40157372.9371.60
Alexander EremenkoSalavat Yulaev Ufa12725:3484521.9341.65
Georgi GelashviliLokomotiv Yaroslavl171050:13106331.9331.89
Edgars MasaļskisDinamo Riga6373:3032121.9341.93

Final standings

RankTeam
1 Ak Bars Kazan
2 HC MVD
3 Salavat Yulaev Ufa
4 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl
5 Metallurg Magnitogorsk
6 Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk
7 Spartak Moscow
8 Dinamo Riga
9 SKA Saint Petersburg
10 Dynamo Moscow
11 Atlant Mytishchi
12 Avangard Omsk
13 CSKA Moscow
14 Barys Astana
15 Traktor Chelyabinsk
16 Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg
17 Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod
18 Severstal Cherepovets
19 Dinamo Minsk
20 Sibir Novosibirsk
21 Amur Khabarovsk
22 Lada Togliatti
23 Vityaz Chekhov
24 Metallurg Novokuznetsk

Awards

Players of the Month

Best KHL players of each month.

KHL Awards

On 25 May 2010, the KHL held their annual award ceremony. A total of 20 different awards were handed out to teams, players, officials and media. The most important trophies are listed in the table below.
Golden Stick Award Alexander Radulov
Play-off Master Award Ilya Nikulin
Alexei Cherepanov Award Anatoli Nikontsev

The league also awarded six "Golden Helmets" for the members of the all-star team: