KHL 11/30 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v アドミラル・ウラジオストク L 2-3
KHL 11/28 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v セヴェルスター・リチェレポベツ L 1-2
KHL 11/27 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v クンルン・レッド・スター W 3-2
KHL 11/25 09:00 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v ネフテヒミク・ニズネカムスク W 3-1
KHL 11/22 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v HCソチ W 5-2
KHL 11/20 14:00 - メタルルグ・マグニトゴルスク v シビル・ノボシビルスク L 4-1
KHL 11/18 13:00 - クンルン・レッド・スター v シビル・ノボシビルスク L 3-2
KHL 11/16 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v メタルルグ・マグニトゴルスク L 2-3
KHL 11/14 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v トルペド・ニズニー・ノブゴロド W 4-1
KHL 11/10 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v ロコモティフ・ヤロスラブリ L 1-2
KHL 11/08 14:00 - メタルルグ・マグニトゴルスク v シビル・ノボシビルスク L 6-3
KHL 11/06 11:30 - アフトロモビリスト・エカテリンブルク v シビル・ノボシビルスク W 2-3
KHL 11/04 11:30 - サラバトウラエフUFA v シビル・ノボシビルスク L 2-0
KHL 11/02 16:00 - ネフテヒミク・ニズネカムスク v シビル・ノボシビルスク L 3-1
KHL 10/30 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v HCヴィトヤーズ W 3-2
KHL 10/28 10:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v CSKAモスクワ L 3-6
KHL 10/26 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v スパルタクモスクワ W 4-3
KHL 10/22 11:30 - アフトロモビリスト・エカテリンブルク v シビル・ノボシビルスク W 1-3
KHL 10/20 16:00 - AKバーズカザン v シビル・ノボシビルスク W 2-3
KHL 10/18 16:00 - トルペド・ニズニー・ノブゴロド v シビル・ノボシビルスク W 4-5
KHL 10/16 16:30 - ディナモモスクワ v シビル・ノボシビルスク L 2-1
KHL 10/13 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v メタルルグ・マグニトゴルスク L 2-4
KHL 10/11 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v トラクトール・チェリャビンスク L 4-5
KHL 10/06 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v アフトロモビリスト・エカテリンブルク L 0-4
KHL 10/04 16:30 - スパルタクモスクワ v シビル・ノボシビルスク L 5-2
KHL 10/02 14:00 - トラクトール・チェリャビンスク v シビル・ノボシビルスク L 2-1
KHL 09/30 11:00 - FCバリーズ v シビル・ノボシビルスク W 1-2
KHL 09/27 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v SKAサンクトペテルブルク L 0-3
KHL 09/25 12:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v ディナモモスクワ W 3-2
KHL 09/23 10:30 - シビル・ノボシビルスク v FCバリーズ W 4-2

Wikipedia - HC Sibir Novosibirsk

Hockey Club Sibir Novosibirsk Oblast (Russian: ХК Сибирь, English: Siberia HC), also known as HC Sibir or Sibir Novosibirsk, is a Russian professional ice hockey team based in Novosibirsk. They are members of the Chernyshev Division in the Kontinental Hockey League.

History

Ice hockey was introduced to Novosibirsk in 1948 by Ivan Tsyba, who returned from a hockey seminar in Moscow with equipment to play the sport. Immediately popular amongst the populace, the local sports society, Dynamo, decided to establish a hockey team. The first hockey rink was built in autumn 1948 near the Ob River. A second rink was built in February 1949, at the Spartak Stadium. Several teams played in Novosibirsk in this era, the strongest being Dynamo. They were promoted to the Soviet Championship League for the 1954–55 season, finishing in ninth place overall, out of ten teams. They would finish as high as ninth two more times in the Soviet era, in both 1956–57 and 1959–60 (when the league had 16 and 18 teams, respectively). A youth team was formed in 1954, to serve as a development club for the senior team. In its first season of play, it won bronze in the national championship.[]

In 1962, owing to financial difficulties, Dynamo merged with another team in Novosibirsk, Khimik. Though Dynamo played in the top division, its equipment was of a lesser quality than Khimik, which played in the lowest division and was run by a local chemical factory; the resulting team was renamed Sibir Novosibirsk.

During the first decades of its history, Sibir was subsequently relegated between the elite and second-rate divisions of the Soviet and Russian hockey championships until it finally settled in the Superleague after the 2002–03 season.

After the formation of the Kontinental Hockey League, the team had to change 50% of its roster. Starting with the 2009–10 season, the head coach position was taken by Andrei Tarasenko, a former Novosibirsk forward and a father of the club's young winger Vladimir Tarasenko, who led Sibir to its first Gagarin Cup playoffs in 2011.

Before the 2013–14 season, Sibir changed its full name from Sibir Novosibirsk to Sibir Novosibirsk Oblast.

After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Nick Shore and Harri Sateri elected to leave the team.