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・ Igor Kokhanovsky
・ Igor Kokoškov
・ Igor Kolb
・ Igor Koleda
・ Igor Koliev
・ Igor Kollár
・ Igor Kolodinsky
・ Igor Kolyvanov
・ Igor Kon
・ Igor Konovalov
・ Igor Korchilov
・ Igor Kordey
・ Igor Korneev
・ Igor Kornelyuk
・ Igor Korobeynikov
Igor Korolev
・ Igor Koronov
・ Igor Koshin
・ Igor Kostin
・ Igor Kostolevsky
・ Igor Kot
・ Igor Kotora
・ Igor Kovalenko
・ Igor Kovalevich
・ Igor Kovačić
・ Igor Kováč
・ Igor Kozioł
・ Igor Kozlov
・ Igor Kozoš
・ Igor Kralevski


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Igor Korolev : ウィキペディア英語版
Igor Korolev

Igor Borisovich Korolyov ((ロシア語:Игорь Борисович Королёв); September 6, 1970 – September 7, 2011) was a professional ice hockey player and coach. Korolev played over 700 games in the National Hockey League (NHL) from 1992 until 2004. Korolev returned to Russia, and played a further seven seasons in the Russian Super League (RSL) and the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) before retiring from active play in 2010. In 2011, Korolev accepted an assistant coach position with Lokomotiv Yaroslavl. Korolev was killed in the 2011 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl air disaster along with nearly the entire roster of the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl of the Kontinental Hockey League for whom he was coaching. A native of the Russian Republic of the Soviet Union, Korolev became a naturalized Canadian citizen in 2000.〔〔
==Playing career==
Korolev began his professional playing career with HC Dynamo Moscow in the 1988–89 season appearing once. The following season, Korolev became a full member of the team, playing 17 games. He played two further full seasons with Dynamo. In all three seasons, Dynamo won the league championship. Korolev was drafted by the St. Louis Blues in the second round, 38th overall in the 1992 NHL Entry Draft. After five games with Dynamo in the 1992–93 season, Korolev left to join the Blues. Korolev played for the Blues for two seasons. Korolev was unsigned in the 1994–95 season and he returned to Dynamo. He was picked up by the Winnipeg Jets on waivers in 1995 and stayed with the team as it moved to Phoenix. He signed as a free agent with Toronto in 1997. He was traded to Chicago in 2001 where he played until 2004. He then returned to Russia and signed with Lokomotiv Yaroslavl. After one season, he transferred to Metallurg Magnitogorsk, where he played three seasons. He played one season with Atlant Moscow Oblast and one final season with Lokomotiv Yaroslavl where he retired after the 2009–10 season. He became an assistant coach with the team and was still an assistant at the time of his death.

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