Soviet Championship (1948–1992) Founded in 1947 as a team of the
Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant, Traktor have played for the Soviet and Russian championships since 1948. In 1948-1953 the team was called
Dzerzhinets and
Avangard in 1954 - 1958. The current name was adopted starting with the
1958–59 season. Traktor played its first game in the top league on December 12, 1948 against
CDKA Moscow.
Viktor Shuvalov, a future star of Moscow clubs
VVS and
CSKA, led the team in scores during its first season in the championship. In
1955 Chelyabinsk reached the fourth place for the first time (back then a medal table still was dominated by the Moscow teams). In 1965 - 1968, Traktor played in the second division of the Soviet hockey championships. The team returned to the first division in 1968. In 1973, Traktor played in the
USSR Cup finals against the CSKA. Although Traktor led 2-0, they lost the game with a score of 2-5. In the 1976-77 season Traktor won bronze in the Soviet hockey championships, the team's highest achievement during the Soviet period of its history. At that time, Traktor produced several players who achieved international prominence. One of the best Soviet forwards of all times,
Sergei Makarov, was born in Chelyabinsk and began his career in Traktor. Along his teammate, defenseman
Sergei Starikov, he regularly played on the Soviet national team from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s. Starikov and Makarov each won over 10 international tournaments with Team USSR.
International League and Russian Superleague years (1992–2008) In the early 1990s, Traktor twice finished third in the
International Hockey League under head coach
Valery Belousov. A group of Traktor players, including
Sergei Gomolyako,
Valeri Karpov,
Igor Varitsky,
Ravil Gusmanov and others, appeared on Team Russia at several world championships. During the late 1990s ice hockey in Chelyabinsk entered a period of decline. In 1998 Traktor was relegated to the
Vysshaya Liga and was replaced in its role as the major hockey team of
Chelyabinsk by
Mechel. The team found its way back to the elite only in 2006. Coached by
Gennady Tsygurov they won the second division championship earning promotion to the Russian Superleague. After the 2006-07 season, Tsygurov resigned. He was replaced by
Andrei Nazarov, a native of Chelyabinsk who had spent 13 seasons in the NHL as an enforcer. Although he succeeded at securing Traktor's place in the top league, Nazarov's coaching style led Traktor to a new world record in overall penalty minutes in a single game that was set after the mass brawl versus
Ak Bars Kazan in January 2008.
First seasons in the KHL (2008–2010) During
2008–09 KHL season Traktor was reinforced by its alumni
Ravil Gusmanov and NHL star
Oleg Kvasha. Despite a good start Chelyabinsk finished the regular season with disappointing results and eventually failed to advance in the playoffs further than the first round losing the series to
Atlant Moscow Oblast with an overall score 13-2. Kvasha was named the team's MVP of the season. 2009 was also notable for the club's move to the
Arena Traktor. The first game in the new arena, played against
Metallurg Magnitogorsk, was won by 3-2. The first player to score a goal was defenceman
Andre Lakos. Before the
2009–10 season the team had to face budget cuts and lose its biggest stars including
Oleg Kvasha and
Evgenii Dadonov. After an unstable performance in the regular season the team advanced to the playoffs with the lowest seed ultimately losing to its natural rival
Metallurg Magnitogorsk in the first round.
Return of Belousov (2010–present) During the 2010 off-season
Nazarov left to coach infamous
Vityaz Chekhov and was replaced by Andrei Sidorenko who was fired off his job right after the disastrous start of the season. In October 2010
Valery Belousov returned as Traktor's head coach, but, nonetheless, during the
2010–11 the team failed to make the playoffs. After the lackluster season the team finally fixing its financial issues seriously rearranged the roster with future stars such as
Vladimir Antipov,
Stanislav Chistov,
Jan Bulis,
Petri Kontiola and goaltender
Michael Garnett. The results were immediate, Traktor became the best team of the
2011–12 regular season winning
Continental Cup and taking bronze medals after losing to Avangard Omsk in Eastern Conference Finals. The biggest breakthrough of the season was a young winger
Evgeny Kuznetsov who led the team in points. Another homegrown Chelyabinsk player,
Konstantin Panov, who returned to Traktor after five seasons of absence, became the team's goal scoring leader. Traktor kept all of its leaders for the
2012–13 season. Unlike many other clubs in the league Chelyabinsk did not sign any NHL players who were returning to Europe during the
NHL lockout. Facing much stronger competition this time Traktor finished the regular season in the third place of the Eastern Conference. Kuznetsov continued his successful career leading the team in points, goals and assists. 17 years old forward
Valeri Nichushkin became that season's major breakthrough for Chelyabinsk, later in 2013 he won the Cherepanov Trophy as the KHL's Rookie of the Year and was picked in the top 10 of the
NHL entry draft by the
Dallas Stars. On its way to the
Gagarin Cup Finals Traktor had to endure three seven game series against
Barys Astana,
Avangard Omsk and
Ak Bars Kazan, all three of those rounds were won back by the team from the position of 3-1 down in the series. One of the main components of the success was goaltender Michael Garnett who had 5 shutouts during the post-season and
GAA of 1.86. However, the team was less fortunate in the final games played versus the defending champions
Dynamo Moscow. Failing to take the lead in the series Traktor ultimately lost it 4-2. ==Season-by-season KHL record==