#roman lyubimov
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movienized-com · 7 months ago
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Prorok. Istoriya Aleksandra Pushkina
Prorok. Istoriya Aleksandra Pushkina (2025) #FelixUmarov #YuraBorisov #PaulinaAndreeva #AnyaChipovskaya #SergeyGilev #IlyaLyubimov Mehr auf:
Jahr: 2025 (Februar) / Пророк. История Александра Пушкина Genre: Biografie / Drama Regie: Felix Umarov Hauptrollen: Yura Borisov, Paulina Andreeva, Anya Chipovskaya, Sergey Gilev, Ilya Lyubimov, Evgeniy Shvarts, Roman Vasiliev, Kai Aleks Getts, Ivan Zlobin, Yuriy Utkin, Lyudmila Grigorash, Ilya Vinogorskiy, Kirill Kovbas, Nikita Krahmalev, Pavel Kuzmin, Vadim Pirozhenko … Filmbeschreibung:…
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My favourite hockey players  → KHL  [3/?]
Roman Lyubimov #13 (CSKA)
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ivanprovolone · 8 years ago
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Happy Valentine’s Day from the Flyers! (x)
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baby-schenn10 · 8 years ago
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the flyers crushing it again with their valentine’s day cards (x)
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hockey-insta · 8 years ago
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lyubim13: 🏒⛸
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iaintafraidofnoghostbear · 8 years ago
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betazeds · 8 years ago
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Flyers Valentine’s Day cards (3/3)
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mikal-newverth-blog · 8 years ago
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idk who alt is but !!!!!!
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thepinerider · 8 years ago
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Fixing Flyers' Salary Cap
It wouldn't be a season for the Philadelphia Flyers if they weren't dealing with salary cap issues. Since the salary cap was implemented in the NHL following the 2005 lockout, the Flyersl have always had problems with fitting the team within the cap restraints. Back then, it was Derian...
Via: http://thehockeywriters.com/fixing-flyers-salary-cap/
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hugheshoe · 4 years ago
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mary met the flyers: who she's met!
here is a list of all the players i have met during my lifetime:
march 1, 2015 (flyers wives carnival)
brayden schenn
luke schenn
zac rinaldo
matt read
nick schultz
bernie parent
steve mason
ray emery
michael raffl
march 3, 2016 (flyers vs. oilers game)
ilya bryzgalov
march 13, 2016 (flyers wives carnival)
radko gudas
nick cousins
mark streit
matt read (again)
jay rosehill
nick schultz (again)
claude giroux
steve mason (again)
pierre-edouard bellemare
shayne gostisbehere
november 6, 2016 (flyers wives carnival)
dale weise
michael del zotto
michal neuvirth
roman lyubimov
michael raffl (again)
shayne gostisbehere (again)
nick cousins (again)
matt read (third time)
travis konecny
ivan provorov
brayden schenn (again)
claude giroux (again)
sam morin
danick martel
robert hagg
colin mcdonald
chris vandevelde
sean couturier
november 19, 2017 (flyers wives carnival)
scott laughton
robert hagg (again)
wayne simmonds
chris conner
radel fazleev
oskar lindblom
will o'neill
mike vecchione
mikhail vorobyev
taylor leier
dale weise (again)
tyrell goulbourne
greg carey
anthony stolarz
brandon manning
travis sanheim
brian elliott
valtteri filppula
michael raffl (third time)
nolan patrick
sam morin (again)
james de haas
mark friedman
colin mcdonald (again)
phil myers
reece willcox
november 18, 2018 (flyers wives carnival)
nicolas aube-kubel
alex lyon
sean couturier (again)
radko gudas (again)
scott laughton (again)
nolan patrick (again)
calvin pickard
jake voracek (again*)
jordan weal
dale weise (third time)
cole bardreau
connor bunnaman
greg carey (again)
chris conner (again)
ron hextall
james van riemsdyk
june 27, 2019 (trial on the isle)
cam york
bobby brink
morgan frost
felix sandstrom
german rubtsov
will mackinnon
ronnie attard
egor zamula
jackson cates
wade allison
marcus westfall
gavin hain
colin felix
joel farabee
ben meyers
jay o'brien
mason millman
maksim sushko
matt anderson
samuel ersson
kirill ustimenko
bryce brodzynski
roddy ross
olle lycksell
noah cates
david kase
wyatt kalynuk
adam ginning
pascal laberge
isaac ratcliffe
maxim golod
matt strome
connor bunnaman (again)
ben mccartney
emmettt sproule
seamus donohue
wyatt wylie
mika cyr
carson briere
carsen twarynski
nick schultz (third time)
february 23, 2020 (flyers wives carnival)
tyler pitlick
carter hart
joel farabee (again)
connor bunnaman (third time)
nicolas aube-kubel (again)
justin braun
james van riemsdyk (again)
matt niskanen
phil myers (again)
in total it is 105 players (not counting repeats!)
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goalhofer · 5 years ago
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2019-20 Metallurg Magnitogorsk Players By Nationality
Russian: 20 (Victor Antipin, Alexei Berezgalov, Yevgeny Biryukov, Pavel Dorofeyev, Grigori Dronov, Stanislav Galimov, Vladimir Galuzin, Vasily Koshechkin, Nikolai Kulyomin, Andrei Loktionov, Roman Lyubimov, Artyom Minulin, Sergei Mozyakin, Arkhip Nekolenko, Denis Parshin, Danil Pyatin, Nikita Rozhkov, Evgeny Timkin, Ivan Vereshchagin & Egor Yakovlev)
Canadian: 3 (Brandon Kozun, Eric O'Dell & Paul Postma)
Swedish: 2 (Maxim Matushkin & Dennis Rasmussen)
Belarussian: 1 (Dmitry Buinitsky)
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what-the-hell-is-tbl · 8 years ago
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Team Russia extended roster for IIHF Worlds 2017
Goaltenders: Andrei Vasilevskiy (Tampa Bay Lightning, NHL) Ilya Sorokin (CSKA Moscow, KHL) Igor Shestyorkin (SKA St Petersburg, KHL)
Defensemen: Viktor Antipin (Metallurg Magnitogorsk, KHL) Anton Belov  “A” Artyom Zub (both - SKA St Petersburg, KHL) Andrei Mironov (Dynamo Moscow, KHL / Colorado Avalanche, NHL???) Ivan Provorov (Philadelphia Flyers, NHL) Vladislav Gavrikov (Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, KHL) Bogdan Kiselevich Mikhail Naumenkov (both - CSKA Moscow, KHL) Alexei Bereglazov (NY Rangers, NHL)
Forwards: Artemi Panarin (Chicago Blackhawks, NHL) Vadim Shipachyov  “A” Evgeni Dadonov Nikita Gusev Sergei Plotnikov Alexander Barabanov (all - SKA St Petersburg, KHL) Vladislav Namestnikov Nikita Kucherov (both - Tampa Bay Lightning, NHL) Sergei Mozyakin  “C”  (Metallurg Magnitogorsk, KHL) Vladimir Tkachyov (Ak Bars Kazan, KHL) Ivan Telegin Sergei Andronov Valeri Nichushkin Andrei Svetlakov Kirill Kaprizov (all - CSKA Moscow, KHL) Roman Lyubimov (Philadelphia Flyers, NHL)
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baby-schenn10 · 8 years ago
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flyers family skate was full of smiles
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londontheatre · 7 years ago
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Sergei Polunin is delighted to announce full casting for Project Polunin’s SATORI, which will play a limited season at the London Coliseum from 5th to 10th December 2017, with a press night on Wednesday 6th December 2017.
Joining Polunin in Goleizovsky’s Scriabiniana will be Natalia Osipova, Valentino Zucchetti & Akane Takada from The Royal Ballet, Yaoqian Shang from Birmingham Royal Ballet, Laurretta Summerscales & Yonah Acosta from Bayerisches Staatsballett, Alexey Lyubimov from The Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko Moscow Academic Music Theatre, Evgenia Savarskaya from Bolshoi Ballet, Jason Reilly & Elisa Badenes from Stuttgart Ballet and Alexandre Riabko & Silvia Azzoni from Hamburg Ballet.
The cast for Satori includes Sergei Polunin, Natalia Osipova, Jason Reilly, Alexey Lyubimov and The Royal Ballet School Junior Associate Thomas Waddington.
As previously announced, Polunin will star in First Solo.
Scriabiniana and Satori will be accompanied by the Orchestra of English National Opera, conducted by Gavin Sutherland.
First Solo Choreographer: Andrey Kaydanovskiy Cast: Sergei Polunin Music: Tèw Semagn Hagèré by Alèmu Aga (Kronos Explorer Series, 2009) & Se Me Hizo Facil, by Agustín Lara, (Kronos Quartet, 2002), with poetry by Alexander Galich.
First Solo is a new 7-minute ballet created by Andrey Kaydanovskiy which will star Polunin. Kaydanovskiy is currently a demi-soloist at the Ballett der Wiener Staatsoper und Volksoper, where he has also worked as a choreographer, creating for the company drei undebekannte (2009) and Love Song (2013). In 2016, he created Tea or Coffee for the Stanislavsky Theatre in Moscow, and received the prestigious German Dance Prize (Deutscher Tanzpreis) as a choreographer that same year.
Scriabiniana Choreographer: Kasyan Goleizovsky Composer: Alexander Scriabin Choreography Restoration: Ksenia Oyvental Director: Roman Mikhejenkov Costume Designer: Sofia Filatova Casting: Valentino Zucchetti Cast: Sergei Polunin & Natalia Osipova, Valentino Zucchetti & Akane Takada/Yaoqian Shang (Friday and Sat matinee only), Laurretta Summerscales & Yonah Acosta, Alexey Lyubimov & Evgenia Savarskaya, Jason Reilly & Elisa Badenes, Alexandre Riabko & Silvia Azzoni. The London premiere of the most complete version of Kasyan Goleizovsky’s ballet suite, Scriabiniana, with music by Alexander Scriabin, will be backed by a full orchestra and marks Goleizovsky’s 125th birthday anniversary. Renowned innovator and choreographer, Goleizovsky (1892-1970) was a pupil of Fokine and Gorsky and was hailed as Balanchine’s main inspiration. He danced at the Bolshoi Theatre before founding his own company, Moscow Chamber Ballet (1916), where he created many innovative choreographic works. He also created a number of ballets for the Bolshoi Theatre, the most significant of which was Joseph the Beautiful (1925). Goleizovsky was then forced to leave the Bolshoi Theatre and worked in various theatres throughout the USSR, whilst, in Moscow and Leningrad, he focused his attention on concert programmes and music halls. Goleizovksy didn’t return to the Bolshoi Theatre until the 1960s, where he created two ballets – Scriabiniana (1962) and Leili and Mejnun (1964).
Satori Choreographer: Sergei Polunin Composer: Lorenz Dangel Director: Gabriel Marcel del Vecchio Set Design: David LaChapelle Costume Design: Angelina Atlagic Lighting Design: Christian Kass Casting: Valentino Zucchetti Cast: Sergei Polunin, Natalia Osipova, Jason Reilly, Alexey Lyubimov and Thomas Waddington.
The world premiere of Satori is choreographed by Sergei Polunin, with direction by Gabriel Marcel del Vecchio and an original score by German-born Lorenz Dangel, who has won multiple awards for his film scores. At 19, Polunin was the youngest ever dancer to become a Principal with The Royal Ballet. After four years in the company, he went on to perform in Russia with the Stanislavsky Theatre and Novosibirsk Opera and Ballet Theatre. Earlier this year, Sergei’s story was made the subject of documentary feature film Dancer produced by Gabrielle Tana. The documentary is book-ended with Sergei’s Take Me To Church video, directed by David LaChapelle, which has now amassed over 21 million views. Later this year, Sergei will be seen in the new Kenneth Branagh film adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express, due for release in November.
Project Polunin aims to convey the joy of dance through theatre, live broadcast, film, social media platforms and virtual reality, and, by collaborating with dancers, filmmakers, musicians, writers and artists, to create new works that will reflect our times as well as preserving and celebrating the history of classical dance. Project Polunin will strive to demonstrate the unifying power of dance.
Gabriel Marcel del Vecchio is director of SATORI. Gabe is a lifetime member of The Actors Studio, alumnus of Second City, NAACP award nominee and Master Clown with the prestigious Cirque du Soleil, where he recently re-conceptualised Zarkana with Daniel Passer, John Gilkey and Francois Gerard. He has just launched a worldwide university tour of Elisa Noemi’s Good Enof and is currently developing an immersive virtual reality production with Bianca Sapetto (Cirque du Soleil), Robin Finck (Nine Inch Nails), choreographer Jade Hale-Christofi, mythologist Gahl Sasson and top JPL computer scientists. Most recently Gabe had the privilege of working with his friend and mentor Martin Landau on a future production of Othello.
SATORI is produced by David Banks, Gabrielle Tana and Sergei Polunin in collaboration with Daniel Hodgdon.
Website: http://ift.tt/2zCDHdq Facebook: http://ift.tt/2zWkK6d Twitter: @SergeiPolunin_ Instagram: Sergeipolunin
LISTINGS INFORMATION 5 – 10 December 2017 London Coliseum St Martin’s Lane London WC2N 4ES
http://ift.tt/2zCDIhu London Theatre 1
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junker-town · 7 years ago
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The NHL's decision to skip the Olympics is causing some Russian players to leave the league
The NHL is forgoing the 2018 Winter Olympics, and that has complicated its relationship with Russian players.
Hockey fans have known since April that the NHL will not be sending players to the 2018 Winter Olympics. Most of the focus since that decision came to light has been on the star players under contract — like Alex Ovechkin or Jonathan Toews — and whether they will try to defy the league’s wishes and go anyway.
The first few weeks of the NHL’s free agency, however, has shown us an emerging trend not from those players under contract, but from Russian free agents. The Olympics have added another wrinkle to negotiations for those players.
Since the start of the NHL’s free agency on July 1, a handful of second- and third-tier players have opted to sign in the KHL, Russia’s top hockey league. Flyers forward Roman Lyubimov and Blackhawks goaltender Lars Johansson officially signed with CSKA Moscow at the start of July, along with former NHL first-round pick Mikhail Grigorenko and former Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Nikita Nesterov.
In Lyubimov’s case, the 25-year-old forward specifically cited the Olympics as the reason for his return to the KHL. Also citing the Olympics as a reason for playing in the the KHL next season? Coveted free agent Ilya Kovalchuk, who recently said he wasn’t going to return to the NHL after rumors of his return lit up this offseason.
Here’s Kovalchuk’s statement on re-signing in the KHL, from CSKA Moscow.
"One of the main factors was the upcoming Olympic Games. In 2018, only players who play in European championships and the KHL can compete there.”
Washington Capitals forward Evgeny Kuznetsov actually “considered” playing in the KHL as well, but the team gave the 25-year-old an “an offer [he] couldn’t refuse,” according to Russian Machine Never Breaks. Kuznetsov also said the Olympics were a “significant factor” in his consideration to play in the KHL, but his new eight-year, $62.4 million deal with the Capitals was enough to keep him stateside.
Since April, the Russian Hockey Federation has made it known that it was interested in bringing Russian free agents back into the fold for the upcoming Olympics while keeping the ones it already has. However, a handful of the bigger names on the market have elected to stay in the NHL. Alexander Radulov signed a five-year, $31.25 million contract with the Stars. Andrei Markov is still weighing his options, but a return to the Canadiens could be likely now that the market is drying up.
Most notably, however, is Evgeny Dadonov returning to the Florida Panthers on a three-year, $12 million deal and 30-year-old forward Vadim Shipachyov signing with the Golden Knights to herald in a new hockey age in Vegas. In the end, money speaks louder than anything else.
This give and take between the NHL and KHL is nothing new for the two hockey leagues. The KHL is hockey’s second-biggest league behind the NHL, and players from both leagues have flip-flopped between them for some time. During the most recent lockout in 2012, many NHLers took their talents to the KHL to continue playing hockey. More than a handful of KHL players like Artemi Panarin and Nikita Zaitsev have found homes in the NHL.
The Olympics is just the latest snag between the two leagues, and one that has given the KHL a leg up with certain players who consider the 2018 Winter Games a high priority. Russia as a whole is well-known for its pride on the success of their national hockey team, and its disappointing fourth-place finish behind the United States in the 2012 Winter Olympics in Sochi was considered a national nightmare.
While Russia has medaled in five of the last six IIHF World Championships — including two gold medals — the Russian Hockey Federation sees the Olympics as a unique opportunity to succeed in 2018 without the NHL backing normal hockey heavyweights in the United States, Canada, and Sweden.
Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images
Where the NHL seemingly gets back to almost equal footing in this relationship is the money, and if teams can offer enough of it to sate players’ appetites. It’s why lower-tier players like Lyubimov and Grigorenko have taken deals in Russia, because they fetch similar or higher pay in the KHL while also getting the bonus of potential Olympic time.
Players like Markov — who said he’s “too old” for the Olympics — and Dadonov are still playing at an NHL caliber, and clearly command a good chunk of money and term on the free agent market. The Olympics may be a priority for the Kuznetsovs and Radulovs of the NHL, but the money tipped the scales.
Kovalchuk is quite the outlier in that case, in that his talents are certainly in demand for NHL teams but he decided to stay in the KHL instead. Part of his reasoning to stay in the KHL for one year is that the New Jersey Devils hold his rights until next season, after which he becomes an unrestricted free agent. But a one-year deal also gives him the best of both worlds: A chance to play in the Olympics in the upcoming season, then a return to the NHL for a lucrative contract in the next.
And that one year is key, because the NHL and KHL don’t have a transfer agreement like other European hockey leagues do. Players who sign in the KHL have to commit to that time, unlike other European leagues like the Swedish Hockey League that pay transfer fees for players who go to the NHL.
While the NHL free agent market is quite dry after the floodgates opened on July 1, it’s possible that more players will flock to the KHL as the summer moves along. Players like Markov, Jaromir Jagr, Jarome Iginla, and Shane Doan might all consider it because of their age and for one last chance at Olympic glory before retirement.
With the addition of Kovalchuk to the mix, however, it’s clear that the Olympics are a big factor for Russian free agents in where they want to play for the next upcoming season. Whether or not this trend takes other coveted free agents off the market, it’s one to keep an eye on as we roll through the slow summer months to come.
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winterolympic-en · 8 years ago
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FLYERS: Roman Lyubimov back to Russia, wants to play in Olympics
#WinterOlympic #WinterOlympics [theintell.com]It was bound to happen. Some player with current or past connections to the Flyers was going to come out and acknowledge playing in the 2018 Winter Olympics was more important than playing in the National Hockey League. That player is Roman Lyubimov ...
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