Dinamo Riga | |
---|---|
City | Riga, Latvia |
League |
Soviet Championship League
|
Founded | 1946 |
Operated | 1995 |
Home arena | Rīgas Sporta pils |
Colors | |
Franchise history | |
Dinamo Riga | 1946–1949 |
Daugava Riga | 1949–1967 |
Dinamo Riga | 1967–1991 |
Stars Rīga | 1991–1992 |
Pārdaugava Rīga | 1993–1995 |
Soviet Championship League
1978-1992
Dinamo Riga (Latvian: Rīgas Dinamo) was an ice hockey club, based in Riga, Latvia. It was founded in 1946 and disestablished in 1995 as Pārdaugava Rīga.
Dinamo Riga was established in 1946, after the re-occupation of Latvia by the Soviet Union. The club was one of the 12 teams which participated in the first Soviet championship in the season of 1946/1947. The team's first official game was a victory 5-1 against Dinamo Tallinn on December 1946. The first season was considered as a success, as the team finished the tournament in fourth place. The club's first roster mainly consisted from the players of the interwar Latvian national team.
At first the club had no permanent place, where the home games were held, but since the season 1950/1951, Dinamo started to play home games at Daugava Stadium, but the games still were played on a natural ice rink and the go ahead of the games depended on suitable weather, The situation didn't change until the 1960/1961 season, when the stadium was heavily reconstructed.
Dinamo Riga changed its name to Daugava Riga before the start of the 1949/1950 season, and kept it for a decade, before the team changed its name again. In the mid-fifties, the core of the team - players, which started their careers before the Second World War, started to retire, and the team started to slip further down the table as the years went by.
The club again changed its name and since season 1958/1959 and now was known as RVR Riga, but the name didn't last long as the club two years later was renamed once again to Daugava (RVR). The name changes didn't help the team's cause and the club slipped to the third division. During the sixties, the club adopted a new player and staff recruiting policy, switching from local talent developing to gathering players from all corners of Soviet Union and even abroad. The club again changed owners and the name of Dinamo Riga was restored before the 1967/1968 season, which ended as the worst season in the club's entire history.