krying for krutov...

Welcome to the main forum of our site. Anything and everything to do with the Vancouver Canucks is dicussed and debated here.

Moderator: Referees

User avatar
ukcanuck
MVP
MVP
Posts: 4591
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2011 3:04 am

krying for krutov...

Post by ukcanuck »

Dead at 52, somehow I thought he was a lot older than that, guess it only seems like his time with the canucks was before cooperalls and wire cage goalie masks
User avatar
donlever
CC Legend
Posts: 10188
Joined: Tue Feb 28, 2012 2:07 pm

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by donlever »

Well hot fukin dog....
DeLevering since 1999.
User avatar
tantalum
CC Hall of Fan Member
Posts: 1911
Joined: Mon Aug 09, 2004 3:41 am
Location: Carl Junction, MO

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by tantalum »

donlever wrote:Well hot fukin dog....
:lol:
Vpete
CC 2nd Team All-Star
Posts: 320
Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2011 3:01 pm

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Vpete »

Mad skills but the good life of the west was too much to resist.
Brick Top: Do you know what "nemesis" means? A righteous infliction of retribution manifested by an appropriate agent. Personified in this case by an 'orrible cunt... me.
User avatar
Per
MVP
MVP
Posts: 9331
Joined: Fri Jul 15, 2011 7:45 am
Location: Sweden

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Per »

Fantastic player. Extremely talented and an integral part of the KLM line in an era when the Big Red Machine was more or less unbeatable. He won two Olympic golds, six world championships plus the Canada Cup.

Unfortunately he couldn't handle the freedom of the West or the post-Soviet era, and his careerbcame to an abrupt and unfortunate end at the age of 32 already.

From what I hear his untimely death may well have been the result of over-eating and over-drinking.

Either way, I'll always remember him as one of the greatest players of his generation.

:cry:
Whatever you do, always give 100 %!
Except when donating blood.
User avatar
donlever
CC Legend
Posts: 10188
Joined: Tue Feb 28, 2012 2:07 pm

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by donlever »

Greg Adams remembers Vladimir Krutov as a quiet man who struggled to fit in during his first and only season in the NHL with the Canucks.

According to reports, Krutov, one of the Soviet Union’s all-time great hockey players and part of the national team's storied KLM Line, died at age 52 in Moscow on Wednesday.

Krutov arrived in the NHL in 1989 along with countryman and fellow linemate Igor Larionov on the fabled Soviet KLM line. The expectations were huge that Krutov and Larionov – two of the top players in international hockey – would make the Canucks an elite team. It failed miserably and Vancouver missed the playoffs that season.

“Vlad was a quiet guy who didn't say much,” recalled Adams, a member of that team who's now a realtor in Phoenix. “I felt sorry for him in a way. There was a lot of pressure on those guys. Igor lived up to those expectations, but Vlad didn't.”

Larionov arrived in the summer and attended training camp, but Krutov was delayed and showed up in poor condition.

“Vlad and Igor were two different guys. Coming in, Igor was still a great player, whereas Vlad didn't arrive here in the same (physical) condition.

“You can't step into the NHL and not be in shape,” said Adams. “But you could see in practice that he still had his talent, he still had ability, but his conditioning made it too hard for him to compete. He came in like that and he couldn't catch up.”

Larionov, who went on to win three Stanley Cups with Detroit, was outgoing and had a reasonable grasp of English when he arrived. Krutov had almost none and it made it difficult for him to fit in with the team, said Adams.

“He never really learned much English and the language barrier was a big obstacle for him to overcome,” said Adams. “It's tough to come to a different county with no English.”

According to a report by Associated Press, the Russian Hockey Federation said Krutov died Wednesday. It did not give a cause of death, but the ITAR-Tass news agency said he had been taken to a hospital several days earlier for stomach bleeding.

“Volodya was such a dependable and steadfast man that I would have gone anywhere with him – to war, to espionage, into peril. There are fewer and fewer guys like him in every generation of hockey players,” federation president and former Soviet goaltender Vladislav Tretyak told the Sport-Express newspaper.

Born in Moscow, Krutov gathered attention for his play with a local factory team Meteor and was then invited to the hockey school of the CSKA Moscow club. He played with the team between 1978-89.

Krutov and his CSKA teammates Larionov and Sergei Makarov formed one of the most potent scoring lines that hockey has ever seen, and led the Soviet team to gold in the 1984 and 1988 Olympics. He was also part of the team that lost to the United States at the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics and won five world championship titles in the 1980s.

Along with defencemen Vyacheslav Fetisov and Alexei Kasatonov, they became known as the “Green Unit” for the color of their practice jerseys.

He was one of the first Soviet players to play in the NHL, but spent only one undistinguished season with the Vancouver Canucks. He later played for Zurich and Swedish lower-league clubs Ostersund and Brunflo, and coached CSKA for one season in 2001-02.

After that, he was director at a state sports school. In 2010, he was inducted into the International Ice Hockey Federation’s hall of fame.


Vancouver Province
DeLevering since 1999.
User avatar
donlever
CC Legend
Posts: 10188
Joined: Tue Feb 28, 2012 2:07 pm

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by donlever »

Image

Image

If pic two resembles YOU time for a change...
DeLevering since 1999.
User avatar
Blob Mckenzie
MVP
MVP
Posts: 31105
Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 12:34 pm
Location: Oakalla

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Blob Mckenzie »

donlever wrote:Image

Image

If pic two resembles YOU time for a change...
I'm far better looking, I have better hair, better teeth and am a way better dresser.
“I don’t care what you and some other poster were talking about”
User avatar
donlever
CC Legend
Posts: 10188
Joined: Tue Feb 28, 2012 2:07 pm

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by donlever »

....still huffin' the ganj, eatin' hotdogs and popcorn for sustenance Blob?

:sly:
DeLevering since 1999.
User avatar
Aaronp18
MVP
MVP
Posts: 4670
Joined: Thu Jul 07, 2011 10:36 pm

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Aaronp18 »

donlever wrote: If pic two resembles YOU time for a change...
Knowing that Vladdy is done at 52 if pic one resembles you time for a change!
User avatar
Strangelove
Moderator & MVP
Moderator & MVP
Posts: 42804
Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2004 12:13 pm
Location: Lake Vostok

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Strangelove »

Yep, looks like he drank himself into an early grave.

RIP Vladimir Crouton.
____
Try to focus on someday.
User avatar
Arachnid
CC Legend
Posts: 6249
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2008 12:56 pm

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Arachnid »

From Tank to Hank...we've come a long way baby...

So long fat alcoholic communist soviet hockey dude... :(
I love every move Jim Benning makes 8-)
User avatar
Per
MVP
MVP
Posts: 9331
Joined: Fri Jul 15, 2011 7:45 am
Location: Sweden

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Per »

"We were both from CSKA Moscow and we kept in touch our whole lives. He was the soul of the team, an open and uncomplicated guy. He was easy-going off the ice, but on the ice he was unstoppable.
When we played the Canadians and they tried to injure him, he stood up, he was strong. He was one of the greatest athletes of our time, a true champion. I don't know any one who could compare to him. It's a great loss for Russia."

Slava Fetisov
Whatever you do, always give 100 %!
Except when donating blood.
User avatar
Strangelove
Moderator & MVP
Moderator & MVP
Posts: 42804
Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2004 12:13 pm
Location: Lake Vostok

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Strangelove »

Per wrote: "Canadians tried to injure him"
:evil:

Commie propaganda....
____
Try to focus on someday.
Farhan Lalji

Re: krying for krutov...

Post by Farhan Lalji »

ukcanuck wrote:Dead at 52, somehow I thought he was a lot older than that, guess it only seems like his time with the canucks was before cooperalls and wire cage goalie masks
Sorry if this is an inappropriate remark on my part, but it's a genuine question:

Did he happen to pass away due to type 2 diabetes complications?

Regardless - RIP Vladimir.
Post Reply