The proportion of Russians in the NHL (on a GP %) is the highest since 2003-04

WarriorofTime

Registered User
Jul 3, 2010
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An under the radar trend the last few years has been that Russians are accounting for a very much higher percentage of games played, the highest post 2004-05 Lockout. As of now, Russian players have accounted for 6.1 % of man Games Played throughout the League.

The "low" occurred in 2014-15 at 3.2 %. The all time high was 8.2 % in 2000-01.

Last few years trend:

2017-18: 4.1
2018-19: 4.4
2019-20: 4.8
2020-21: 5.5
2021-22: 5.5
2022-23: 5.8
2023-24: 6.2
 
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Kshahdoo

Registered User
Mar 23, 2008
19,366
8,660
Moscow, Russia
An under the radar trend the last few years has been that Russians are accounting for a very much higher percentage of games played, the highest post 2004-05 Lockout. As of now, Russian players have accounted for 6.1 % of man Games Played throughout the League.

The "low" occurred in 2014-15 at 3.2 %. The all time high was 8.2 % in 2000-01.

Last few years trend:

2017-18: 4.1
2018-19: 4.4
2019-20: 4.8
2020-21: 5.5
2021-22: 5.5
2022-23: 5.8
2023-24: 6.1

It's fake news. Everybody and their grand-grand aunty knows that Russian government doesn't allow Russian players to come to NHL.
 

mr figgles

Registered User
Mar 24, 2012
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so what changed?

It‘s not a good time to be a young fit male in Russia.

But mostly, I would imagine the KHL being founded in 2008 has something to do with it. I’m sure they were investing heavily in hockey including youth hockey, and looking at the trend over the last few years you’re seeing those investments bear fruit as those yutes come of age.
 
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Acallabeth

Post approved by Ovechkin
Jul 30, 2011
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so what changed?
Most importantly, the gap between the KHL and NHL paycheck increased. Both ruble and especially dollar-salaries are much less impressive now (IIRC, Larionov

The MHL-VHL-KHL system becoming much more successful and attractive for the players' development is a big factor as well. There are much more players drafted from Russia the recent years, which translates directly to the number of NHL players. And perhaps fewer player bury their careers in the CHL.

The translation between the leagues is easier than ever. The difference in playing style is also not as obvious as it used to be, the cultural and language barriers have diminished as well, the NHL clubs are not as hesitant to bring the KHL stars over after success of Panarin, Kaprizov, Kuzmenko and so on.

It's also interesting that the current generation of players (1995-2005) represents the era with the lowest amount of births in Russian history.
 
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majormajor

Registered User
Jun 23, 2018
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Most importantly, the gap between the KHL and NHL paycheck increased. Both ruble and especially dollar-salaries are much less impressive now (IIRC, Larionov

The MHL-VHL-KHL system becoming much more successful and attractive for the players' development is a big factor as well. There are much more players drafted from Russia the recent years, which translates directly to the number of NHL players. And perhaps fewer player bury their careers in the CHL.

The translation between the leagues is easier than ever. The difference in playing style is also not as obvious as it used to be, the cultural and language barriers have diminished as well, the NHL clubs are not as hesitant to bring the KHL stars over after success of Panarin, Kaprizov, Kuzmenko and so on.

It's also interesting that the current generation of players (1995-2005) represents the era with the lowest amount of births in Russian history.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I also remember that government support for hockey, particularly ice rinks, went way up, in the years around 2010 if I remember correctly.

The trend I'm seeing:

- Soviet trained players were largely responsible for the high water mark of Russians in the NHL, with 8% around 2000.

- Then with the 90s collapse of state funding for sport, the number of youth players fell, this was felt in the NHL numbers 10-20 years later, I think that's most of the decline to the 3% figure in 2015.

- State support goes back up around 2010 - shows up in the NHL numbers a dozen years later.
 

WarriorofTime

Registered User
Jul 3, 2010
28,956
17,113
End of season bump. 6.2 % of man games played by Russians this year and 6.5 % of players to make an appearance (min 1 game) boosted by a lot of late season callups.

Broken down by position:

5.6 % of games played by forwards
5.8 % of games played by defensemen (I think people would be surprised that D was slightly proportionally higher than F)
15.6 % of games by a goaltenders (this certainly gets the most discussion).

Here is the 5-year trend across countries (2018-19 percentage of man games played -> 2023-24 percentage and the change)

Canada: 43.6 % -> 42.4 % (-1.2 %)
United States: 27.0 % -> 28.8 % (+1.8 %)
Sweden: 11.2 % -> 9.4 % (-1.8 %)
Finland: 4.9 % -> 4.9 % (+0.0 %)
Russia: 4.4 % -> 6.2 % (+1.8 %)
Czechia: 3.5 % -> 2.7 % (-0.8 %)
Switzerland: 1.5 % -> 1.4 % (-0.1 %)
Slovakia: 0.9 % -> 0.9 % (+0.0 %)
Denmark: 0.9 -> 0.6 % (-0.3 %)
Germany: 0.8 % -> 1.0 % (+0.2 %)

"Other": 1.4 % -> 1.8 % (+0.4 %)
 
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