Rytíři Kladno
CityKladno, Czech Republic
LeagueCzech Extraliga
Founded1924 (1924)
Home arenaČEZ Stadion
(capacity: 5,200)
Colours
  • Dark blue, white
  •    
  • Secondary: light blue, light gold, ocean blue, dark gold
  •        
Owner(s)Jaromír Jágr
General managerJiri Burger
Head coachOtakar Vejvoda
CaptainTomáš Plekanec
Websiterytirikladno.cz
Franchise history
1924–1948HOSK Kladno
1948–1949TJ Sokol Kladno
1949–1953TJ Sokol SONP Kladno
1953–1958DSO Baník Kladno SONP
1968–1977TJ SONP Kladno
1977–1989TJ Poldi SONP Kladno
1989–1997HC Poldi Kladno / HC Kladno
1997–2000HC Velvana Kladno
2000–2003HC Vagnerplast Kladno
2003–2006HC Rabat Kladno
2006–2010HC GEUS OKNA Kladno
2010–2011HC Vagnerplast Kladno
Since 2011Rytíři Kladno

Rytíři Kladno (English: Kladno Knights) is a Czech professional ice hockey team based in the city of Kladno. They are currently a member of the Czech Extraliga.[1] The team president and owner is Jaromír Jágr, a former NHL player, who is currently playing in home games for the team in addition to his ownership and administrative roles.[2][3] The team plays its home games at ČEZ Stadion.

History

Kladno was a particularly strong team in the late 1970s, when it won four consecutive league titles (1975–1978), and again in 1980. The team's star, Milan Nový, was league MVP in 1977, 1981, and 1982, and won six scoring titles. František Pospíšil was the league MVP in 1971 and 1972. The team was sponsored by the State Security police until the Velvet Revolution of 1989.

Before the 1997-98 season Kladno lost its sponsor, ironworks Huť Poldi. Eventually the Poldi crest disappeared from Kladno jerseys and the successes that this once famous club achieved in previous years also disappeared, perennially finishing last in the league. Primarily the lack of funds did not allow to management improvement of club cadre and the main coach resigned.[4]

Despite the departure of a number of players abroad in 2003, Kladno continued to perform well and celebrated return to the Czech highest-level league. However after the season 2012-13 Kladno performed poorly in the extraliga. Nor the withdrawal of coaches helped, the team reached the highest league again after the 12 years.

Jaromír Jágr played for his hometown Kladno for parts of four seasons, including during the NHL lockouts in 1994, 2004, and 2012. In January 2018, Jágr was assigned to HC Kladno after a partial season with the Calgary Flames.[5] Jágr took over majority ownership from his father in 2011.[6]

During the 2010–2011 season, the team was docked 6 points for having used players who were not correctly registered to the club, an affair which also involved the clubs BK Mladá Boleslav and HC Plzeň.[7]

Summary of league participation

Club names

Rytíři Kladno players (2017)

The club began in 1924 as the ice hockey department of SK Kladno, abbreviated HOSK Kladno. When the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia seized the Czechoslovak government in 1948, private sports clubs were reorganized as tělovýchovných jednot (TJ, lit.'physical education unities') and obligated to join the Sokol movement; HOSK Kladno was therefore renamed TJ Sokol Kladno. The following year, the club became associated with the United Steelworks (Spojené ocelárny, národní podnik, SONP), a national enterprise which operated the former Poldi steelworks in Kladno, and its name was expanded to TJ Sokol SONP Kladno.

When the Czechoslovak State Committee for Physical Education and Sport (SVTVS) was established in 1953, all sports clubs were designated as voluntary sports organizations (dobrovolné sportovním organizacím, DSO) and nine DSOs were created in affiliation with trade unions. TJ Sokol SONP Kladno was renamed DSO Baník Kladno SONP, as 'Baník' was the name of the DSO affiliated with the union of miners and steelworkers. The club name was shortened to TJ SONP Kladno in 1958 and that name was used for almost twenty years, until it was expanded to TJ Poldi SONP Kladno in 1977.

Following the Velvet Revolution in 1989, the club returned to private ownership and was called HC Poldi Kladno. The club retained the 'HC Kladno' element of its name for the following two decades, though the full club name changed multiple times for sponsorship reasons. Sponsors included Poldi, which had been re-privatized; Velvana, an automotive chemical manufacturer; Vagnerplast, an acrylic bathtub manufacturer; Rabat, a construction materials supplier; and GEUS Okna, a window manufacturer.

The club has been named Rytíři Kladno since 2011.

Timeline

  • 1924 – HOSK Kladno (Hokejový odbor sportovního klubu Kladno, 'Hockey department of sports club Kladno')
  • 1948 – TJ Sokol Kladno (Tělovýchovná jednota Sokol Kladno, 'Physical education coalition Sokol Kladno')
  • 1949 – TJ Sokol SONP Kladno (Tělovýchovná jednota Sokol Spojené ocelárny, národní podnik Kladno, 'Physical education coalition Sokol United Steelworks, national enterprise Kladno')
  • 1953 – DSO Baník Kladno SONP (Dobrovolná sportovní organizace Baník Kladno Spojené ocelárny, národní podnik, 'Voluntary sports organization Baník Kladno United Steelworks, national enterprise')
  • 1958 – TJ SONP Kladno (Tělovýchovná jednota Spojené ocelárny, národní podnik Kladno, 'Physical education coalition United Steelworks, national enterprise Kladno')
  • 1977 – TJ Poldi SONP Kladno (Tělovýchovná jednota Poldi Spojené ocelárny, národní podnik Kladno, 'Physical education coalition Poldi United Steelworks, national enterprise Kladno')
  • 1989 – HC Poldi Kladno (Hockey Club Poldi Kladno)
  • 1991 – HC Kladno (Hockey Club Kladno)
  • 1994 – HC Poldi Kladno
  • 1996 – HC Kladno
  • 1997 – HC Velvana Kladno (Hockey Club Velvana Kladno)
  • 2000 – HC Vagnerplast Kladno (Hockey Club Vagnerplast Kladno)
  • 2003 – HC Rabat Kladno (Hockey Club Rabat Kladno)
  • 2006 – HC GEUS OKNA Kladno (Hockey Club GEUS OKNA Kladno)[8]
  • 2010 – HC Vagnerplast Kladno
  • 2011 – Rytíři Kladno (a name chosen by new owner Járomir Jágr, along with a logo proeminently featuring a cross in homage to the Eastern Orthodoxy)[4]

Source: [9]

Players

Current roster

Source: rytirikladno.cz[10]Source: eliteprospects.com[11]As of 15 July, 2023.

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
41 Czech Republic Jakub Babka D R 31 2022 České Budějovice, Czechoslovakia
88 Czech Republic Matěj Beran LW L 30 2021 Plzeň, Czech Republic
89 Czech Republic Ondřej Bláha LW L 23 2018 Prague, Czech Republic
29 Canada Landon Bow G L 28 2021 St. Albert, Alberta, Canada
1 Czech Republic Adam Brízgala G L 25 2018 Prague, Czech Republic
44 Canada Jake Dotchin (A) D R 29 2021 Cambridge, Ontario, Canada
24 Czech Republic Matyáš Filip C L 23 2018 Jindřichův Hradec, Czech Republic
68 Czech Republic Jaromír Jágr RW L 51 2017 Kladno, Czechoslovakia
55 Czech Republic Karel Klikorka D L 22 2023 Prague, Czech Republic
Czech Republic Denis Kusý RW R 26 2023 Prague, Czech Republic
United States Chris Martenet D L 27 2023 Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
43 Czech Republic Antonín Melka LW L 33 2018 Kladno, Czechoslovakia
14 Czech Republic Tomáš Plekanec (C) C L 41 2020 Kladno, Czechoslovakia
23 Czech Republic Martin Procházka RW R 29 2022 Roudnice, Czech Republic
20 Czech Republic Jaromír Pytlík C R 22 2021 Dačice, Czech Republic
Canada Deven Sideroff RW R 26 2023 Summerland, British Columbia, Canada
28 Czech Republic Ondřej Slováček D L 29 2022 Vsetín, Czech Republic
92 Czech Republic Jakub Strnad LW L 31 2023 Kladno, Czechoslovakia
26 Czech Republic Jiří Ticháček D L 20 2020 Kladno, Czech Republic
5 Czech Republic Václav Veber D R 24 2022 Kladno, Czech Republic

NHL alumni

Honours

Domestic

Czech Extraliga

Czech 1. Liga

  • 1st place, gold medalist(s) Winners (2): 2002–03, 2020–21
  • 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Runners-up (2): 2017–18, 2018–19
  • 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 3rd place (1): 2016–17

Czechoslovak Extraliga

1st. Czech National Hockey League

  • 1st place, gold medalist(s) Winners (3): 1983–84, 1984–85, 1986–87

2nd. Czechoslovak Hockey League

  • 1st place, gold medalist(s) Winners (1): 1954–55
  • 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 3rd place (1): 1953–54

International

IIHF European Cup

References

  1. "Zápasy: Rytíři Kladno". Hokej.cz. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  2. "TIPSPORT extraliga 2019/2020 - základní část". Rytíři Kladno (in Czech). 4 January 2020. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  3. "Jágr bude stoprocentním vlastníkem kladenského hokejového klubu". iDNES.cz. 24 April 2017.
  4. 1 2 Waldstein, David (28 February 2023). "The 51-Year-Old Hockey Star Who Won't Quit". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 August 2023.
  5. "Jagr assigned to hometown team HC Kladno". ESPN.com. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  6. "Jagr feels obligated to keep playing for Kladno nearing age 50: report". NHL.com. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  7. "Rozhodnuto: Plzeň, Mladá Boleslav i Kladno přijdou o body". Česká televize (in Czech). 19 November 2010. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  8. "Klub – Historie". HC GEUS OKNA Kladno (in Czech). Archived from the original on 6 October 2007. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  9. "Historie klubu". HC-Kladno.cz (in Czech). Archived from the original on 14 January 2018. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  10. "Team Roster / Rytíři Kladno". www.rytirikladno.cz. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  11. "Team Roster / Rytíři Kladno". www.eliteprospects.com. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
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