Hockey Club Koà ¡ice is a Slovak professional ice hockey club based in Koà ¡ice that competes in the Slovak Extraliga, the top tier of Slovak ice hockey. It is the most successful hockey club in Slovakia and the former Czechoslovakia, having won the Tipos Extraliga ten times, the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League twice, the 1st. Slovak National Hockey League once, the IIHF Continental Cup once, the Tatra Cup 11 times, and the Rona Cup four times. The club is nicknamed "Oceliari" ("Steelers" in English). The team plays at the Steel Arena in Koà ¡ice.
The club was established in Koà ¡ice in 1962 as an army hockey club called TJ Dukla Koà ¡ice. At that time, there were two weak regional ice hockey clubs in the city. The new club was much stronger and joined the Czechoslovak Hockey League within two years. In 1966, Dukla changed its name to TJ VSà ½ Koà ¡ice. In 1986, the club became the Ice Hockey Champions of Czechoslovakia for the first time, beating HC Dukla Jihlava in the finals. It won again in 1988, beating HC Sparta Prague. At that time, the club was the second-best ice hockey club in Europe after CSKA Moscow. After Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, VSà ½ Koà ¡ice became a member of the Slovak Extraliga, which it soon went on to win three times. In 1998, the club changed its name to HC Koà ¡ice.
On 24 February 2006, Koà ¡ice left LokomotÃÂva Koà ¡ice Stadium and moved to the newly constructed Steel Aréna. The arena is named in honour of the club's sponsor, U. S. Steel Koà ¡ice, and is also known as L. Troják Stadium after one of the club's most popular players. Koà ¡ice won the league for the fourth time by defeating HK 36 Skalica to end the 2008âÂÂ09 season. A victory over HC Slovan Bratislava at the end of the 2009âÂÂ10 season saw the club win the league for the second year in a row and the fifth time in total, which it followed up by beating HK Poprad in the finals of the 2010âÂÂ11 season to secure the league for the third year in a row (the first "hat trick" in the league's history) and the sixth time in total. Koà ¡ice qualified for the finals for the sixth time in a row at the 2012âÂÂ13 season, but suffered a loss to HKm Zvolen. A victory over HK Nitra in the finals of the 2013âÂÂ14 season led Koà ¡ice to its seventh league victory. The club won its eighth and most recent league during the 2014âÂÂ15 season, defeating HC '05 Banská Bystrica in the finals.
1st. Slovak National Hockey League