HC Košice

Hockey Club Košice is a professional ice hockey team playing in the Slovak Extraliga and is one of the most successful hockey teams in Slovakia and the former Czechoslovakia. The team is nicknamed Oceliari, it means Steelers in English.

History
The club existed since 1962, when it was established as an army hockey team named TJ Dukla Košice. At that time, there were two weak regional ice hockey clubs in Košice. The new club was pretty mighty and within two years it joined the Supreme Czechoslovak League.

In 1966 Dukla accepted a new name TJ VSŽ Košice. Twenty years later, in 1986, the club became, for the first time, the Ice Hockey Champion of Czechoslovakia (beat HC Dukla Jihlava in finals). In 1988, TJ VSŽ Košice obtained its second lead - in finals beat HC Sparta Prague. At that time, the team of VSŽ Košice was the second best ice hockey team in Europe after legendary CSKA Moscow (The European Cup 1987 and 1989).



In 1992, the federal Czechoslovak parliament decided to split country into two independent states – the Czech Republic and Slovakia, as of January 1, 1993. As a Slovak team, VSŽ Košice became a member of the Slovak Extraliga, and in the next years obtained three titles of Slovak hockey champion.

In 1998, the club changed name again. Hockey Club (HC) Košice removed to Lokomotíva Košice Stadium because of the Steel Aréna – Košice‘s L. Troják Stadium construction. The new home arena of HC Košice was open on February 24, 2006. It is named in honour of the general sponsor of HC Košice – the U. S. Steel Košice (a member of the United States Steel Corporation, U.S.A.) and legendary Košice‘s ice hockey player Ladislav Troják.

Since 2008-09, HC Kosice has won four Slovak Extraliga champions, the most recent of which in 2013-14.

Season-by-season results
''This is a partial list of the last seven seasons completed by HC Košice. Code explanation; GP&mdash;Games played, W&mdash;Wins, OTW&mdash;Overtime wins, OTW&mdash;Overtime losses, L&mdash;Losses, GF&mdash;Goals for, GA&mdash;Goals against, Pts&mdash;Points. Top Scorer: Points (Goals+Assists)

Domestic
Slovak Championship (7): Czechoslovak Championship (2): 1. SNHL (1):
 * 1994–95, 1995–96, 1998–99, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2013–14
 * 1985–86, 1987–88
 * 1963–64

International
IIHF European Champions Cup
 * Runners-up: 1987, 1989

IIHF Continental Cup
 * 1998