Interview with Gary Mossman by Joe Pelletier on Hockey Book Reviews.Com, January 12, 2014
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The Business World of Russian Football
THESIS – BACHELOR'S DEGREE PROGRAMME SOCIAL SCIENCES, BUSINESS AND ADMINISTRATION THE BUSINESS WORLD OF RUSSIAN FOOTBALL Issues and Prospects AUTHOR : Roman Andreev LI17SP SAVONIA UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES THESIS Abstract Field of Study Social Sciences, Business and Administration Degree Programme Degree Programme in Business and Administration Author Roman Andreev Title of Thesis The Business World of Russian Football. Issues and Prospects Date 10.12.2020 Pages/Appendices 70/0 Client Organisation /Partners Abstract Beyond any doubt, football, known as soccer in North America, remains to be one of the most influential sport games in the history of humanity. Up to this day, soccer continues to captivate billions of sports enthu- siasts all over the globe. Football has achieved great recognition, and it is now considered the most popular sport in the world. Nowadays it is appropriate and entirely justified to talk about the emergence of the foot- ball industry. Basically, modern soccer can be viewed as an international business, since global player trans- fers are made on a regular basis and international professional tournaments are organized. Moreover, soccer leagues may be now rightfully classified as separate commercialized industries. Certain football tournaments perform much better than their competitors in a business sense. In this work, the Russian Premier League in particular is discussed. The aim of the study is to investigate the historic and current issues of Russian soccer, the reasons for their emergence, and the present state. Furthermore, the commercial prospects and possibilities for local football’s business development are inspected. Potential solu- tions to the outlined problems are demonstrated as well. -
Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Tretiak the Legend by Vladislav Tretiak Reusse: How Did a Russian Sports Legend End up in Detroit Lakes? BUFFALO, MINN
Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Tretiak The Legend by Vladislav Tretiak Reusse: How did a Russian sports legend end up in Detroit Lakes? BUFFALO, MINN. – The suggestion that everyone knows everyone in the world of hockey might be an exaggeration. Change that to everyone in the hockey world knows someone to put them in touch with everyone and you’re speaking the truth. This was particularly the case in 1988, when John and Lyn Erickson from Fargo purchased the International Hockey School in Detroit Lakes. A couple of years later, John used his friendship with Fargo’s Scott Bye, a financial adviser for NHLers, to meet Blackhawks goalie Ed Belfour, who had been working with Vladislav Tretiak, a part-time goalie coach in Chicago, and Belfour told Erickson that he might be able to hire the Russian legend as the star attraction for his goalie camp in Detroit Lakes. And in June 1991, Tretiak and his wife, Tatiana, were staying at the Fairyland Cottages (modeled after those seen in the film “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs”) on the northern shore of Detroit Lake, and getting ready for his first day at the Minnesota camp. Bill Manuel, a former goalie at Wisconsin-Stout and Lyn Erickson’s brother, recalls the first meeting when Tretiak relayed his message through Anna Goruven, his business agent and interpreter, and then agreed to take questions from campers. “We had five or six goalie instructors and had been saying, ‘OK, who is going to be the first to ask?’?” Manuel said. “Meaning, who among us was going to be the first to ask Tretiak about getting pulled as the Soviet goalie in the loss to the U.S. -
Sport-Scan Daily Brief
SPORT-SCAN DAILY BRIEF NHL 4/4/2020 Anaheim Ducks Nashville Predators 1182159 When Teemu Selanne became a Stanley Cup champion 1182183 Predators fan survey: How do readers feel about the direction of the team? Arizona Coyotes 1182160 Arizona Coyotes get time for hobbies, family with season New Jersey Devils on hold 1182184 Scouting Devils’ 2019 draft class: Patrick Moynihan ‘really 1182161 Coyotes in the playoffs! 10 thoughts on the (original) end valuable’ because he has ‘versatility and adaptabi of the regular season New York Islanders Boston Bruins 1182185 Islanders’ Johnny Boychuk left unrecognizable by scary 1182162 Talk about a fantasy draft: Here are the ultimate cap-era skate gash Bruins teams 1182186 Barry Trotz, Lou Lamoriello praise Gov. Cuomo's 1182163 Bruins' Brad Marchand voted best AND worst trash-talker leadership amid coronavirus situation in NHL players' poll 1182164 Bruins legend Bobby Orr's great feat from April 3, 1971 New York Rangers still hasn't been matched 1182187 Rangers Prospect K’Andre Miller Faces Racial Abuse in a Team Video Chat Buffalo Sabres 1182188 Rangers fan video chat with prospect K’Andre Miller 1182165 Sabres' prospects preparing in case Amerks' season interrupted by racist hacker resumes 1182189 Rangers’ K’Andre Miller chat zoom-bombed by racist trolls 1182190 Henrik Lundqvist’s Rangers end is hard to digest Calgary Flames 1182191 NY Rangers assistant GM Chris Drury discusses K'Andre 1182166 Flames superstar Gaudreau piling firewood during NHL Miller, other college signings pause 1182192 Rangers, -
Report on the Charitable Activity of the Elena and Gennady Timchenko Foundation Timchenko Elena & Gennady Timchenko Foundation Foundation Contents
2015 REPORT ON THE CHARITABLE ACTIVITY OF THE ELENA AND GENNADY TIMCHENKO FOUNDATION TIMCHENKO ELENA & GENNADY TIMCHENKO FOUNDATION FOUNDATION CONTENTS Message from Elena and Gennady Timchenko .....................4 Working with the Foundation.............................................109 Message from Xenia Frank .....................................................6 Selecting grant recipients .............................................. 110 Message from Maria Morozova .............................................8 Open grant competitions ............................................... 110 The Foundation’s mission statement and values ................10 Non-competitive support ................................................111 Work programme ..................................................................11 Duration of project support ............................................111 5 years of work – facts and results ...................................... 12 Programme evaluation system ...........................................111 Key results in 2015 .............................................................. 16 Risk management ...............................................................112 Interaction with stakeholders .............................................112 Working with enquiries from the public .........................112 THE OLDER GENERATION PROGRAMME .......................18 Working with regional agents .........................................113 Society for all Ages Focus Area ............................................24 -
Okhrana Records
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt538nf189 Online items available Register of the Okhrana records Finding aid prepared by Andrej Kobal and Sally DeBauche Hoover Institution Archives 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA, 94305-6010 (650) 723-3563 [email protected] © 1964, 2016 Register of the Okhrana records 26001 1 Title: Okhrana records Date (inclusive): 1883-1917 Collection Number: 26001 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Archives Language of Material: Russian Physical Description: 232 manuscript boxes, 86 card file boxes, 6 oversize boxes(194.6 linear feet) Abstract: Intelligence reports from agents in the field and the Paris office, dispatches, circulars, headquarters studies, correspondence of revolutionaries, and photographs, relating to activities of Russian revolutionists abroad. Collection is available on microfilm (509 reels). Digital copies of select records also available at https://digitalcollections.hoover.org. Physical Location: Hoover Institution Archives Creator: Russia. Departament politsii. Zagranichnaia agentura (Paris) Access Microfilm use only. Digital copies of select records also available at https://digitalcollections.hoover.org. The Hoover Institution Archives only allows access to copies of audiovisual items. To listen to sound recordings or to view videos or films during your visit, please contact the Archives at least two working days before your arrival. We will then advise you of the accessibility of the material you wish to see or hear. Please note that not all audiovisual material is immediately accessible. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Okhrana records, [Index number, Folder number], Hoover Institution Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 1926. -
Making the Russian Bomb from Stalin to Yeltsin
MAKING THE RUSSIAN BOMB FROM STALIN TO YELTSIN by Thomas B. Cochran Robert S. Norris and Oleg A. Bukharin A book by the Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. Westview Press Boulder, San Francisco, Oxford Copyright Natural Resources Defense Council © 1995 Table of Contents List of Figures .................................................. List of Tables ................................................... Preface and Acknowledgements ..................................... CHAPTER ONE A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE SOVIET BOMB Russian and Soviet Nuclear Physics ............................... Towards the Atomic Bomb .......................................... Diverted by War ............................................. Full Speed Ahead ............................................ Establishment of the Test Site and the First Test ................ The Role of Espionage ............................................ Thermonuclear Weapons Developments ............................... Was Joe-4 a Hydrogen Bomb? .................................. Testing the Third Idea ...................................... Stalin's Death and the Reorganization of the Bomb Program ........ CHAPTER TWO AN OVERVIEW OF THE STOCKPILE AND COMPLEX The Nuclear Weapons Stockpile .................................... Ministry of Atomic Energy ........................................ The Nuclear Weapons Complex ...................................... Nuclear Weapon Design Laboratories ............................... Arzamas-16 .................................................. Chelyabinsk-70 -
Business Plan for Ice-Hockey Center
Saimaa University of Applied Sciences Faculty of Business Administration, Lappeenranta Degree Programme in International Business Ilia Shtengelov Business Plan for Ice-hockey Center Thesis 2017 Abstract Ilia Shtengelov Business Plan for Ice-hockey Center, 96 pages, 1 appendix Saimaa University of Applied Sciences Faculty of Business Administration, Lappeenranta Degree Programme in International Business Thesis 2017 Instructor: Lecturer Pekka Mytty, Saimaa University of Applied Sciences The purpose of the study was to develop a business plan for an ice-hockey center in Finland to be implemented in the future. The theory related to a business plan concept is explained in the beginning. Afterwards, business plan was created according to the outline including strategic, marketing, financial and risk management plans. Apart from that, marketing research was conducted, which is the basis of a marketing plan. The information was gathered from the literature and Internet sources. Author’s experience and knowledge in the field supplemented empirical part, which was mostly done according to in-depth interviews and observation data. In-depth interviews were conducted with General Manager of TUTO Hockey club, two players from Junior Hockey League and a coach from SKA St. Petersburg Academy. Financial plan was designed according to International Ice Hockey Federation guide and the writer’s forecasts. As a result of this thesis, a business plan for ice-hockey center was developed. Business plan is a tool for the author, which represents how the project should be developed during implementation stage. Moreover, this business plan is assumed to be delivered to potential investors. Keywords: business plan, ice-hockey center, ice-hockey infrastructure, sport marketing 2 Table of contents Acknowledgements ............................................................................................ -
Megasport Megasport Moscow Moscow
MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW MEGASPORT MOSCOW MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW Department sports MEGASPORT Moscow MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW www.megasPort.center MEGASPORT MOSCOW MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW Department sports Moscow MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW MEGASPORT MOSCOW MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOWTHE BIGGEST INDOOR ARENA IN MOSCOW Department sports Moscow MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW www.megasPort.center MEGASPORT MOSCOW MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW Department sports Moscow SPORT PALACe “MEGASPORT” 3 MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW www.megasPort.center MEGASPORT MOSCOW MEGASPORT MEGASPORT MOSCOW MOSCOW Department sports Moscow ArchitectUre Sport Palace “Megasport” n.a. A.V. Tarasov is sit- with two spiraliform ramps expanding downward. The Convenient location, unique uated in the north-west of Moscow, in Khodyn- ramps separate stream of people along the sectors. Sit- Embodiment ka field. It is the focal point of the surrounding ing of the entrances, halls, and lobbies are connected sports arena, high quality environment which immediately attracts all at- to them. Thanks to their variable width, from 30 meters infrastructure make the complex tention. below till 5-6 meters as they go up, the building gets ad- OF FUnctionaLitY ditional expression and distinctiveness. one of the best and advanced Architectural treatment of the complex embod- sport and concert venue in ies the ideas of functionality and esthetics Roof and frames of one ramp is in blue color, and the and esthetics other is in red. When combined with white siding of the Moscow. Nine-storied cylindrically shaped building (120 building they compose Russian state flag colors empha- meters in diameter, 40 meters high) is belted sizing the scale and importance of the facility. -
Sport-Scan Daily Brief
SPORT-SCAN DAILY BRIEF NHL 04/07/18 Anaheim Ducks Colorado Avalanche 1107897 Ducks leapfrog Kings with win over Stars 1107932 The Morning After: The Avalanche’s regular-season finale 1107898 Ducks jump back into 3rd place in Pacific with victory over will have a Game 7 feel Stars 1107933 St. Louis Blues at Colorado Avalanche: What you need to 1107899 Ducks’ Ryan Kesler still nowhere near 100 percent, but know ready for the ‘real season’ 1107934 After escaping the pit of misery, Colorado Avalanche’s 1107900 Ducks Gameday: Journeyman goalie Mike McKenna gets playoff hunt rejuvenates weary hockey town rare start for Dallas 1107935 A Game 7 before the playoffs? Everything on the line for the Avalanche, Blues on Saturday Arizona Coyotes 1107901 Arizona Coyotes keep No. 1 goalie Antti Raanta with Columbus Blue Jackets 3-year contract extension 1107936 Blue Jackets notebook | Sergei Bobrovsky liked effort vs. 1107902 Raanta convinced the Coyotes he could be a No. 1 goalie Penguins 1107903 Sedin twins combine for OT winner in farewell, Coyotes 1107937 Finale at Nashville has plenty of importance fall to Canucks 1107938 What are the chances? A look at the Blue Jackets' five 1107904 Arizona Coyotes agree to 3-year extension with Antti possible first-round opponents Raanta Dallas Stars Boston Bruins 1107939 Game preview: Stars hoping to get nice memory for goalie 1107906 The Bruins’ first-round opponent? It’s complicated Mike McKenna Friday against Ducks 1107907 Bruins know they can’t keep playing like they did in a loss 1107940 The good, the bad -
Twenty-Seventh Session 1St-16Th July 1987
INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC ACADEMY TWENTY-SEVENTH SESSION lst-16th JULY 1987 Published by the International Olympic Committee and the Hellenic Olympic Committee in collaboration with Dr. Otto Szymiczek, Dean of the International Olympic Academy INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC ACADEMY REPORT OF THE TWENTY-SEVENTH SESSION lst-16th JULY 1987 ANCIENT OLYMPIA IOC COMMISSION FOR THE INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC ACADEMY President Mr. Nikos FILARETOS IOC Member in Greece Members Mrs. Flor ISAVA FONSECA IOC Member in Venezuela Mr. Roberto G. PEPER IOC Member in Argentina Mr. Wlodzimierz RECZEK IOC Member in Poland Mr. Giorgio de STEFANI IOC Member in Italy Mr. Ahmed D. TOUNY IOC Member in Egypt Mr. Mohamed ZERGUINI IOC Member in Algeria Mr. Francesco GNECCHI-RUSCONE Representative of the IF's President of the International Archery Federation Mr. Abdul-Muttaleb AHMAD Representative of the NOC's Miss Michelle FORD Representative of the Athletes Commission Olympic Champion (swimming) Professor Norbert MULLER Individual Member 7 EPHORIA (BOARD OF TRUSTEES) OF THE INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC ACADEMY President Mr. Nikos FILARETOS IOC Member in Greece Secretary General of the International Committee of the Mediterranean Games First Vice-Président Mr. Ioannis PAPADOYANNAKIS Member of the Hellenic Olympic Committee Second Vice-Président Mr. Vassilis ROTIS Member of the Hellenic Olympic Committee Dean Dr. Otto SZYMICZEK President of the International Track and Field Coaches Association Silver Medal of the Olympic Order Members Mr. George VICHOS Secretary General of the Hellenic Olympic -
Grenoble 1968
GRENOBLE 1968 The Games of the X Winter Olympiad. February 6-18, 1968. Grenoble, France. 1 ALPINE SKIING MEN Downhill 1.Jean-Claude Killy (France) 2 2.Guy Perillat (France) 3 Giant slalom 1.Jean-Claude Killy (France) 4 2.Willy Favre (Switzerland) 3.Heini Messner (Austria) 5 Slalom 1.Jean-Claude Killy (France) 6 WOMEN Downhill 1.Olga Pall (Austria) 2.Isabelle Mir (France) 3.Christl Haas (Austria) 7 Giant slalom 1.Nancy Greene (Canada) 8 Slalom 1.Marielle Goitschel (France) 2.Nancy Greene (Canada) 3.Annie Famose (France) Giant slalom: 2.Annie Famose (France) 9 BIATHLON 20 km 1.Magnar Solberg (Norway) 4 x 7.5 km: 2.Norway (Magnar Solberg) 20 km: 2.Aleksandr Tikhonov (USSR) 4 x 7.5 km: 1.USSR (Aleksandr Tikhonov) 10 BOBSLEIGH Two-man 1.Eugenio Monti / Luciano de Paolis (Italy) 2.Horst Floth / Pepi Bader (West Germany) 3.Ion Panturu / Nicolae Neagoe (Romania) 11 Four-man 1.Italy (Eugenio Monti, Luciano De Paolis, Roberto Zandonella, Mario Armano) 3.Switzerland (Jean Wicki, Hans Candrian, Willi Hofmann, Walter Graf) 12 CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING MEN 15 km 1.Harald Gronningen (Norway) 4 x 10 km: 1.Norway (Harald Gronningen) 13 30 km 1.Franco Nones (Italy) 14 50 km 2.Vyacheslav Vedenin (USSR) 4 x 10 km: 1.Norway (Pal Tyldum) 15 km: 3.Gunnar Larsson (Sweden) 4 x 10 km: 2.Sweden (Gunnar Larsson, Assar Ronnlund) 15 WOMEN 5 km 1.Toini Gustafsson (Sweden) 10 km 1.Toini Gustafsson (Sweden) 3 x 5 km: 2.Sweden (Toini Gustafsson) 16 5 km: 2.Galina Kulakova (USSR) 10 km: 3.Inger Aufles (Norway) 3 x 5 km: 1.Norway (Inger Aufles), 3.USSR (Galina Kulakova) 5 km: -
The 1960 Winter Olympics and US-Soviet Relations
Journal of Undergraduate Research at Minnesota State University, Mankato Volume 11 Article 12 2011 "They Are just Like Us": The 1960 Winter Olympics and U.S.-Soviet Relations Joe Schiller Minnesota State University, Mankato Follow this and additional works at: https://cornerstone.lib.mnsu.edu/jur Part of the Political History Commons, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies Commons, and the Sports Studies Commons Recommended Citation Schiller, Joe (2011) ""They Are just Like Us": The 1960 Winter Olympics and U.S.-Soviet Relations," Journal of Undergraduate Research at Minnesota State University, Mankato: Vol. 11 , Article 12. Available at: https://cornerstone.lib.mnsu.edu/jur/vol11/iss1/12 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Undergraduate Research Center at Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Undergraduate Research at Minnesota State University, Mankato by an authorized editor of Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato. Schiller: "They Are just Like Us": The 1960 Winter Olympics and U.S.-Soviet “They Are Just Like Us”: The 1960 Winter Olympics and U.S.-Soviet Relations Joe Schiller (Department of History) Matthew Loayza, Faculty Mentor (Department of History) My research examined American attitudes towards the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc at the 1960, Squaw Valley Winter Olympics. This includes the press’ prevailing attitude in its depictions of American and western European athletes, versus those of Eastern European athletes. Parallels between these and the 1980 Lake Placid Winter Games are of especial import; a Cold War era Olympics, on American soil, pitting American capitalism against Soviet communism, where the underdog Americans score an ice hockey victory over the Soviets en route to a gold medal.