Flyers versus Red Army was a famous international ice hockey game played on January 11, 1976 between the Philadelphia Flyers of the North America-based National Hockey League (NHL), and HC CSKA Moscow (Central Sports Army Club Moscow, Russian: ХК ЦСКА Москва, also known as the "Red Army Team") of the Soviet Union.
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rdfs:label
| - 1976 Flyers–Red Army game
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rdfs:comment
| - Flyers versus Red Army was a famous international ice hockey game played on January 11, 1976 between the Philadelphia Flyers of the North America-based National Hockey League (NHL), and HC CSKA Moscow (Central Sports Army Club Moscow, Russian: ХК ЦСКА Москва, also known as the "Red Army Team") of the Soviet Union.
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- 1(xsd:integer)
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Home Total
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home per
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- 2(xsd:integer)
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City
| - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
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Arena
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abstract
| - Flyers versus Red Army was a famous international ice hockey game played on January 11, 1976 between the Philadelphia Flyers of the North America-based National Hockey League (NHL), and HC CSKA Moscow (Central Sports Army Club Moscow, Russian: ХК ЦСКА Москва, also known as the "Red Army Team") of the Soviet Union. The game was notable for an incident where, after a body check delivered by the Flyers' Ed Van Impe, CSKA's top player, Valeri Kharlamov, was prone on the ice for a minute. When officials did not call a penalty, the Red Army coach, Konstantin Loktev, pulled his team off the ice in protest. NHL president Clarence Campbell told CSKA to return to the ice and finish the game, which was being broadcast to an international audience, or the Soviet Hockey Federation would not get paid the fee to which they were entitled. They eventually complied and lost that game 4-1.
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