Sergei Zubov | |||
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Sergei Zubov warms up before a 2007 game.
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Born |
Moscow, Russian SFSR, URS |
22 July 1970 ||
Height | 6 ft 1 in (185 cm) | ||
Weight | 198 lb (90 kg; 14 st 2 lb) | ||
Position | Defence | ||
Shot | Right | ||
Played for |
USSR CSKA Moscow NHL New York Rangers Pittsburgh Penguins Dallas Stars KHL SKA St. Petersburg |
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National team |
Soviet Union Unified Team & Russia |
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NHL Draft | 85th overall, 1990 New York Rangers |
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Playing career | 1988–2010 |
Olympic medal record | ||
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Men's ice hockey | ||
1992 Albertville |
Sergei Alexandrovich Zubov (Russian: Сергей Зубов; born 22 July 1970) is the current interim head coach of SKA St. Petersburg and a defensive assignment coach for the Russian national hockey team. A former professional ice hockey defenceman who played for the Dallas Stars, New York Rangers and Pittsburgh Penguins of the National Hockey League as well as SKA St. Petersburg of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL), Zubov won Stanley Cups with the Rangers in 1994 and the Stars in 1999.
Zubov is considered one of the best offensive defensemen in NHL history. He played in the NHL All-Star Game in 1998, 1999, and 2000. He has also won two Stanley Cups, one with the New York Rangers in 1994, and the other with Dallas in 1999. In 1992, Zubov won a gold medal at the Olympic Games, playing for the Unified Team. He is also the NHL's all-time leading scorer among Russian defensemen, and the all-time leading scorer among defensemen in the history of the Stars franchise.
Zubov was drafted in the fifth round of the 1990 NHL Entry Draft by the New York Rangers. Prior to this, he played for the Red Army's hockey team, HC CSKA Moscow, in Russia. He continued to play for the Red Army until 1992, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. . Although Sergei spent some of his rookie season with New York's AHL affiliate, the Binghamton Rangers, he played forty-nine games as a rookie for the Rangers, scoring 31 points, considered then to be above-average for a defenseman. Zubov's high-scoring ways continued, as he scored 12 goals and earned 77 assists during the 1993–94 season, which led the team in regular season scoring. He contributed 19 points to the Rangers' playoff campaign, as he, along with Alexander Karpovtsev, Sergei Nemchinov, and Alexei Kovalev became the first Russians to have their names engraved on the Stanley Cup.