Sorokin-Olympics

In the six years since the New York Islanders drafted Ilya Sorokin, the goalie's legend has grown overseas.
His record stands at 134-64-22 in 244 KHL regular-season games, with a 1.70 goals-against average, a .930 save percentage and 44 shutouts. His numbers get better in the playoffs, with a 1.37 GAA, a .940 SV% and 16 shutouts, to go along with a 50-17 record and a Gagarin Cup, the KHL championship.

"He's one of the best goalies not in the NHL, but not only just goalie, I think player [outside the NHL], said Linden Vey, Sorokin's teammate on CSKA for the past two seasons. "This guy is pretty special."
Sorokin has racked up nearly every accolade the KHL has to offer, with a playoff MVP in 2018-19, the KHL's Best Goaltender award in 2015-16, five All-Star Game appearances and a host of weekly and monthly league honors. Since joining CSKA in 2014-15, he hasn't posted a GAA over 2.00 in the regular season.

Even for the most astute Islanders fan, opportunities to see Sorokin play have been few and far between and usually limited to international tournaments (he's an Olympic gold medalist, too), KHL Twitter, or the weekly
Islanders Prospect Report
. And while his reputation precedes him, those who have played alongside him say there is real reason for the Islanders to be excited.
"I knew he was good, but honestly I didn't realize he was that good when I saw him play," said Mario Kempe, the former NHLer who joined CSKA Moscow halfway through this past season. "He's one of the best goalies I've played with and I've played with Darcy Kuemper, Antti] Raanta and [Jonathan
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"He's super-fast from post-to-post," Kempe said. "Sometimes I think he's out of the play and it's an obvious goal, but he's so quick and can get up and over to the puck. He makes everything look so easy."
That sentiment was shared by Vey, who played parts of four seasons in the NHL with Vancouver, LA and Calgary and has been one of CSKA's leading scorers in the past two seasons. As impressed as Vey is by Sorokin's natural skill, he's blown away by his work ethic.
After CSKA won the KHL title last season, the Russian players were given the option of skipping the first of two training camps this season, the one meant for imports and younger players. Sorokin decided to forgo an extra two weeks of summer to attend camp.
"He was the only high-end guy that was there, he didn't want to take the two weeks off," Vey said. "That shows how committed he is to wanting to get better. That was an eye-opening experience. He's one of the best and still wants to get better. That's a good trait to have."
That's just the on-ice portion and both Kempe and Vey know there's an off-ice transition when moving overseas. Having a Russian teammate like Semyon Varlamov, who has a relationship and shared an agent with Sorokin, should help ease the transition and any cultural/language barriers. According to his teammates, Sorokin has taken some initiative to start learning English.
"For me, I thought he was a good teammate and we got along well," Vey said. "It's hard because when you go over there, most guys speak Russian, so it's a different dynamic than in North America, but he's a guy who is in the mix, he's not one of those guys who just keeps to himself and everything."

Sorokin_MVP_C

Vey said last year's CSKA-St Petersburg series stood out to him as a "wow" moment for Sorokin - and a rebuttal to the criticisms that Sorokin plays behind a stacked CSKA team.
"We were the number one team coming in, but we did not play very well against St. Petersburg," Vey said. "He was pretty much the only reason we ended up beating them in Game 7. That's some of the best goaltending I've been a part of."
Kempe laughed when asked about his "wow" moment, citing the first round of this year's playoffs, when Sorokin was tied as the team's assist leader with two helpers in two games. If there was any indication that the goalie might be ready for a change, perhaps it was that.
"It's too bad our KHL season got cancelled," Kempe said. "With a goalie like that, you have the opportunity to win cups and titles and he could have helped us go a long way."