Hockey Club Slovan Bratislava (Slovak: Hokejový klub Slovan Bratislava) is a professional ice hockey club based in Bratislava, Slovakia. In 2012, it left the Slovak Extraliga and joined the international Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). In 2019, it returned to the Tipos Extraliga. The club has won nine Slovak championships (most recently in 2022), one Czechoslovak championship (1979) and one IIHF Continental Cup (2004), making it the second most successful hockey club in Slovak history after their biggest rival HC Košice. The team plays its home games at Ondrej Nepela Arena, also known as Slovnaft Arena. The team is nicknamed Belasí, which means the "sky blues" in English.

History

The sports club Slovan Bratislava was founded in 1919 as a football club, then called 1.CsSK Bratislava. In 1921, a hockey section was founded as "CsSK hockey". It played its first game in December 1924 against Wiener EV from Vienna, losing 6–1. In 1948, the name of the club was changed to Slovan Bratislava, which has been kept until today.

For many years following World War II, Slovan was the only Slovak representative in the highest Czechoslovak league, and achieved several second-place finishes in the championship. The only title in the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League was achieved under coach Ladislav Horsky in the 1978–79 season. Additionally, the youth teams won several championships.

After the separation of Slovakia and the Czech Republic in 1993, Slovan played in the Slovak Extraliga and won eight championship titles over 19 years.

In addition to the success achieved in Slovakia, Slovan also performed well internationally, with three Spengler Cup wins in a row in 1972, 1973 and 1974. It is also one of only four clubs to play all four seasons of the European Hockey League, progressing to the playoff stage each year. Another highlight was winning the IIHF Continental Cup in the 2003–04 season. From 2011 to 2013, Slovan participated in the European Trophy international pre-season tournament.

KHL

In March 2012, Slovan filed an application to play in the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). On 21 June 2012, Slovan Bratislava was officially admitted to the KHL, after they fulfilled all necessary conditions. Founded in 1921, they were the oldest KHL team by a large margin, as there were no ice hockey leagues in the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics prior to 1946.

2012–13 season

In May, Slovan signed Rostislav Čada as the new head coach for the first KHL season, who had had a KHL experience from working at Avangard Omsk. After playing two friendly matches against KHL teams and the European Trophy during the summer months, Slovan opened the 2012–13 season with a home game against Ukrainian HC Donbass on 6 September 2012, losing 2–4 in front of a capacity crowd. The first win was achieved 4 days later by defeating Spartak Moscow 2–1 after a shootout. During the NHL lockout between September 2012 and January 2013, the two defenders Ľubomír Višňovský and Andrej Sekera enhanced the team. Slovan ended the season with 78 points as 6th of the Western conference and thus clinched a play-off spot in their first KHL season. In the first play-off round, Slovan played against then-defending champion Dynamo Moscow and lost all four matches.

During the regular season, Slovan had sold out 25 out of its 26 home games with an average attendance of 9,977 spectators, which was the seventh-highest average attendance in Europe that season.

Mascot

Before the start of 2013–14 season, it was announced that the franchise will have a new mascot called Harvy. The mascot's name was determined by fans and its appearance will be of a bald eagle, which is also on HC Slovan's logo.

Logo

The previous HC Slovan Bratislava logo

The rebranding of four leading Bratislava clubs in three sports – ice hockey, basketball, and volleyball – marks the completion of their unification under the new owner, JTRE Sports & Entertainment. This is reflected in a shared name and visual identity. From june 2025, the clubs operated under a single name: Slovan Bratislava

For more than three quarters of a century, the Slovan Bratislava brand has been synonymous with the most successful club in Slovakia and one of the most traditional in Europe across multiple sports, bringing together the largest fan base in our city and across the country. The clubs now share a common logo and club colors – sky blue, dark blue, white, with red and grey as complementary colors. A distinctive typographic monogram, SB, has proven to be the ideal link across different sports. Slovan Bratislava. We are sky blue. The name carries tradition, reflects pride, honor, and success.

The new visual identity was created by the agency 2:Score, which has extensive experience with sports projects. The agency is behind, for example, the rebranding of football club Sparta Prague and ice hockey club Kometa Brno, the anniversary season of FC Hradec Králové, as well as a long-term partnership with the Chance League – the top Czech football competition, which launched its biggest branding campaign, Fenomén, this summer.

Rivalries

While competing in the Czechoslovak league, Slovan's main rival was HK Dukla Trenčín. While competing in the Slovak Extraliga, Slovan had various rivals around the country, most notably HC Košice and Trenčin

In Slovan's first two seasons in the KHL, its biggest rival was Lev Prague. The rivalry started when, in their first game, HC Lev's Zdeno Chára body-checked Slovan's team captain Miroslav Šatan, after which Šatan was out of the lineup for the rest of the season. The fairness of this hit was the centre of many discussions. The games between Slovan and Lev were among the most anticipated of the season for both teams. However, Lev Praha folded after the 2013–14 season.

Season-by-season record

This is a partial list of the last eleven seasons completed by HC Slovan Bratislava. For the full season-by-season history, see List of HC Slovan Bratislava seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, OTW = Overtime/shootout wins, OTL = Overtime/shootout losses, L = Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

SeasonGPWOTWOTLLPtsGFGAFinishPlayoffs
2014–1560155832631361887th, Bobrovdid not qualify
2015–16602111424891541483rd, BobrovLost in Conference Quarterfinals, 0–4 (CSKA Moscow)
2016–1760227526851441664th, Bobrovdid not qualify
2017–1856153731581191875th, Bobrovdid not qualify
2018–1962105344331012136th, Tarasovdid not qualify
2019–20552985131081911182nd, ExtraligaNot held due to the coronavirus pandemic
2020–2150266414941461154th, ExtraligaLost in Semifinals, 1–4 (HKM Zvolen)
2021–22503235101041891181st, ExtraligaSlovak Extraliga Champions, 4–2 (HK Nitra)
2022–2350273614931621152nd, ExtraligaLost in Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Dukla Michalovce)
2023–2450215420771571605th, ExtraligaLost in Quarterfinals, 0–4 (Košice)
2024–2554215820811641597th, ExtraligaLost in Wild card round, 1–3 (Zvolen)

Honours

Domestic

International

Pre-season

Players

Current roster

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As of 24 November 2024

No.NatPlayerPosS/GAgeAcquiredBirthplace
14United StatesSena AcolatseDR352024Hayward, California, United States
87SwedenJonas AhnelövDL382023Huddinge, Sweden
65SlovakiaPatrik AndrisíkGL232024Ilava, Slovakia
5SlovakiaPatrik BačíkDL312024Bratislava, Slovakia
83SlovakiaMartin BakošLWR352024Spišská Nová Ves, Czechoslovakia
74SlovakiaBoris BrinckoDL272024Poprad, Slovakia
71SlovakiaTomas DudasCL212023Žilina, Slovakia
30SlovakiaDenis GodlaGL312023Kežmarok, Slovakia
98SlovakiaAndrej GolianDL252021Banská Bystrica, Slovakia
44CanadaMitchell HoelscherCL262024Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
31FinlandHenri KiviahoGL322024Lappeenranta, Finland
82SlovakiaTomas KralovicDR202024Bratislava, Slovakia
77SlovakiaBranislav KubkaDR372023Detva, Czechoslovakia
16SlovakiaRoman KukumbergLWL212022Bratislava, Slovakia
70SlovakiaAdam LukošíkCL242020Prešov, Slovakia
43SlovakiaPatrik MaierDL292020Bratislava, Slovakia
20SlovakiaJakub MinárikCL252022Topoľčany, Slovakia
88United StatesAustin OrtegaRWR322024Escondido, California, United States
28SlovakiaRichard PánikRWL352024Martin, Czechoslovakia
39United StatesLiam Pecararo (A)LWL302022Canton, Massachusetts, United States
72RussiaVadim PereskokovCL322024Oral, Kazakhstan
95Czech RepublicJonáš PeterekCR252024Havířov, Czech Republic
63SlovakiaMiroslav PreisingerCL352021Bratislava, Czechoslovakia
25SlovakiaRadovan PulišRWL342024Hliník nad Hronom, Czechoslovakia
8SlovakiaMichal Sersen (C)DL402012Gelnica, Czechoslovakia
49SlovakiaSamuel Takáč (A)LWL342021Poprad, Czechoslovakia
11CanadaJosh LawrenceCL242026Fredericton, Canada

Franchise scoring leaders

These are the top-ten-point-scorers in franchise history. Figures are updated after each completed season.

  • * – current Slovan player

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game

Points
PlayerPosGPGAPtsP/G
Points Player Pos GP G A Pts P/G Slovakia Richard Kapuš C 583 194 305 499 0.86 Czechoslovakia Václav Nedomanský C 327 277 157 434 1.33 Slovakia Zdeno Cíger LW 321 146 234 380 1.18 Slovakia Martin Kuľha RW 420 187 184 371 0.88 Slovakia Ján Lipiansky C 429 180 179 359 0.84 Slovakia Marián Šťastný RW 225 204 153 357 1.59 Slovakia Martin Hujsa LW 354 153 195 348 0.98 Slovakia Ján Jaško LW 402 193 153 346 0.86 Slovakia Dárius Rusnák F 314 170 164 334 1.06 Slovakia Dušan Pašek C 327 174 132 306 0.94Goals Player Pos G Czechoslovakia Václav Nedomanský C 277 Slovakia Marián Šťastný RW 204 Slovakia Richard Kapuš C 194 Slovakia Ján Jaško LW 193 Slovakia Martin Kuľha RW 187 Slovakia Ján Lipiansky C 180 Slovakia Dušan Pašek C 174 Slovakia Dárius Rusnák F 170 Slovakia Ivan Dornič RW 159 Slovakia Martin Hujsa LW 153Assists Player Pos A Slovakia Richard Kapuš C 305 Slovakia Zdeno Cíger LW 234 Slovakia Martin Hujsa LW 195 Slovakia Martin Kuľha RW 184 Slovakia Ján Lipiansky C 179 Czech Republic Petr Pavlas D 175 Slovakia Dárius Rusnák F 164 Czechoslovakia Václav Nedomanský C 157 Slovakia Marián Šťastný RW 153 Slovakia Ján Jaško LW 153
Slovakia Richard KapušC5831943054990.86
Czechoslovakia Václav NedomanskýC3272771574341.33
Slovakia Zdeno CígerLW3211462343801.18
Slovakia Martin KuľhaRW4201871843710.88
Slovakia Ján LipianskyC4291801793590.84
Slovakia Marián ŠťastnýRW2252041533571.59
Slovakia Martin HujsaLW3541531953480.98
Slovakia Ján JaškoLW4021931533460.86
Slovakia Dárius RusnákF3141701643341.06
Slovakia Dušan PašekC3271741323060.94
PlayerPosG
Czechoslovakia Václav NedomanskýC277
Slovakia Marián ŠťastnýRW204
Slovakia Richard KapušC194
Slovakia Ján JaškoLW193
Slovakia Martin KuľhaRW187
Slovakia Ján LipianskyC180
Slovakia Dušan PašekC174
Slovakia Dárius RusnákF170
Slovakia Ivan DorničRW159
Slovakia Martin HujsaLW153
PlayerPosA
Slovakia Richard KapušC305
Slovakia Zdeno CígerLW234
Slovakia Martin HujsaLW195
Slovakia Martin KuľhaRW184
Slovakia Ján LipianskyC179
Czech Republic Petr PavlasD175
Slovakia Dárius RusnákF164
Czechoslovakia Václav NedomanskýC157
Slovakia Marián ŠťastnýRW153
Slovakia Ján JaškoLW153

Staff

Head coaches

These are the head coaches of HC Slovan Bratislava since they joined the Czechoslovak Extraliga:

Hall of Fame

The following players associated with HC Slovan Bratislava have been inducted in various Halls of Fame:

Hockey Hall of Fame

Hockey Hall of Fame is located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

NameCategoryInducted
Slovakia Peter ŠťastnýPlayer1998

IIHF Hall of Fame

The IIHF Hall of Fame is intended to honor individuals who have made valuable contributions both internationally and in their home countries.

NameCategoryInducted
Czech Republic Václav NedomanskýPlayer1997
Slovakia Vladimír DzurillaPlayer1998
Slovakia Jozef GolonkaPlayer1998
Slovakia Ján StaršíBuilder1999
Slovakia Peter ŠťastnýPlayer2000

External links

  • — HC Slovan Bratislava